Additional funding for Chronic kidney disease research
ANSTO to receive a new grant to continue to fight chronic kidney disease killer in Sri Lanka.
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ANSTO to receive a new grant to continue to fight chronic kidney disease killer in Sri Lanka.
Consumers want to know that the foods they consume provide health benefits. Food materials science can monitor changes during digestion as well as assist in the development of low-fat products.
ANSTO and the User Meeting 2024 organising committee celebrate this years award recipients.
ANSTO has been tracking and publishing data on fine particle pollution from key sites around Australia, and internationally, for more than 20 years.
ANSTO plays a leading role in measuring and characterising fine particles from a range of locations around Australia and internationally.
Robert Russell has been awarded his PhD
Elastic Recoil Detection Analysis (ERDA) is used principally as a method for measuring hydrogen in thin layers, and in the near-surface region of materials.
A number of sophisticated non-invasive nuclear and accelerator techniques were used to provide information about the origin and age of an Australian Aboriginal knife held in the collection of the Powerhouse Museum.
Elucidating molecular basis of the complex viscoelastic properties of polymers
Aaron is the International Research and Development Projects Coordinator at DesignFactory Melbourne, and currently delivers DFM’s global programs with the Centre fo rDesign Research at Stanford University, the SUGAR Network for Global Innovation and Ide
As blood breaks down in the skin tissue, the colour of a bruise changes with time. As such, it may be used to find out information about the age of the bruise and hence a timeframe of when the incident that caused the mark took place.
ANSTO and the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) have been recognised for their valuable contributions to the search and recovery efforts for a missing 8mm-long radioactive capsule in the Western Australian outback.
Radiocarbon dating of mud wasp nests was used as an indirect method of dating the Gwion Gwion style.
Evidence of the earliest occupation of the coasts of Australia from Barrow Island, Northwest Australia.
X-ray crystallography at the Australian Synchrotron contributed to major research findings.