Showing 1321 - 1340 of 2555 results
User Meeting 2020 Prizes & Awards
Awards and prizes granted at the User Meeting 2020 for scientists.
Deuterated squalene and sterols from modified yeast
Services - Echidna
Sample environments, Data Analysis, Mail-in Services.
Neutrinos, atomic clocks and an experiment to detect a time dilation
Griffith University researchers are conducting an experiment at ANSTO that will test a revolutionary physics theory that time reversal symmetry-breaking by neutrinos might cause a time dilation at the quantum scale.
Radiocarbon dating
Radiocarbon dating is a well-known method for determining the age of materials up to the age of approximately 50,000 years.
Critical minerals projects funded under Australian Research Centre Projects Program
ANSTO is contributing to key critical minerals projects funded by the Federal Government.
Interstellar measurements at ANSTO provide new insights into the formation of gold and other heavy elements
ANSTO’s Centre for Accelerator Science measures extra-terrestrial plutonium in a study to clarify the origin of the heavier elements
Meeting the challenges of a changing scientific landscape with virtual power
Australian Nuclear Medicine Traceability Program (ANMTP)
The Australian Nuclear Medicine Traceability Program (ANMTP) assists practices administering nuclear medicine-based radionuclides to achieve regulatory compliance by providing measurement traceability to the Australian Standard.
Research into cell suicide earns scientist a prestigious award
Dr Angus Cowan has been presented with the Stephen Wilkins Medal, which is awarded annually to a PhD student who completed an outstanding thesis based on work at ANSTO’s Australian Synchrotron.
Preventing catastrophic failure in lithium ion batteries
Looking deeply in nitrogen cycling
New three year study with UNSW for Cotton Research Development Corporation.
Advanced synchrotron imaging supports Australian dinosaur research discovery
Groundbreaking research published today in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology by the Museums Victoria Research Institute and Monash University unveiled a landmark discovery – fossils of the world’s oldest known megaraptorid and the first evidence of carcharodontosaurs in Australia.