Showing 1341 - 1360 of 1659 results
Trash to treasure with 3D printing breakthrough
New technology is being developed in Sydney to recycle used Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and turn it into raw materials for 3D printing.
Distinguished lecture: Kimberley rock art
Multi-faceted approach to dating Australian Indigenous rock art from Kimberley region
Disorder by design to improve material properties of sodium-ion batteries
Innovative radioactive waste treatment technology forging ahead
International interest is building in Australia’s new multi-million-dollar radioactive waste processing facility at the Sydney campus of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO).
Travel Funding
ANSTO may provide travel and accommodation support to successful grant applicants from AINSE member organisations. Travel funds granted are to be used solely to cover the majority of the cost to travel to Sydney.
ANSTO's Australian Synchrotron Program Advisory Committees (PAC)
The Program Advisory Committees review proposals submitted to a particular beamline at the Australian Synchrotron
ANSTO congratulates the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry recipients
Role at ANSTO
High Performance Macromolecular Crystallography Beamline (MX3)
The High Performance Macromolecular Crystallography beamline will enable the study of very small (sub-5 micrometre) or weakly diffracting crystals, providing a state-of-the-art high-throughput facility for researchers. MX3 will be able to study the structures of large proteins and protein complexes for virology, drug design and industrial applications via goniometer mounted crystals, in-tray screening, or via serial crystallography methods.
Role at ANSTO
Finding a balance between killing cancer cells without damaging normal cells
Leveraging over half a century of knowledge in the safe management of radioactive waste
ANSTO's Chief Nuclear Officer shares insights on the safe management of Australia's nuclear waste.
Earthquake clues unearthed in strange, precariously balanced rocks
Imperial College London researchers tapped into ancient geological data locked within precariously balanced rocks using a new technique to boost the precision of hazard estimates for large earthquakes.
Promising new cathode material for low-temperature solid-oxide fuel cells
Collaboration locates elusive oxygen ions in new solid electrolyte
Powerful, non-destructive Synchrotron technique provided insights into rare Renaissance manuscript
The analytical power of non-destructive X-ray fluorescence microscopy (XFM) at the Australian Synchrotron has been highlighted in a book chapter in Giorgione, Dante and the Sydney Incunable that features its use on an historic Renaissance work, Dante’s Commedia.
Role at ANSTO
Role at ANSTO
Role at ANSTO