Partnerships
ANSTO works in partnerships and collaborative ventures with national and international organisations. Partner with ANSTO.
Showing 141 - 160 of 372 results
ANSTO works in partnerships and collaborative ventures with national and international organisations. Partner with ANSTO.
Research to understand how contaminants move through the soil and affect ecosystems and humans as well estimating emissions.
ANSTO, the home of Australia’s nuclear science expertise and the Powerhouse Museum, home of Australia’s excellence and innovation in the applied arts and sciences will collaborate on research projects, establish an Indigenous Cultural Research Scholarship and combine efforts on STEM outreach activities.
Australia launched a new international development project in partnership with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to advance ‘Rays of Hope’ in the Asia and Pacific region.
Five exceptional female science communicators are part of a larger team who use skills in education and engagement to promote an interest in science amongst the public and students.
View the upcoming proposal deadlines for access to ANSTO’s Research Portal. The User Office provides support for research proposals and enables you to leverage our world-class research infrastructure and facilities.
Two of Australia’s leading science organisations, ANSTO and the National Measurement Institute (NMI), which share areas of common interest in both measurement and research, signed a MOU formalising collaboration on 6 March 2019.
Research to determine the potential dose from long- lived radioactive substances at mining, legacy sites and nuclear facilities.
Letter to Editor of the Sydney Morning Herald following publication of news report
Dr Luiz Bortolan Neto, a structural materials engineer at ANSTO has received an Industry Partnership award for his significant contribution to defence science at the DMTC annual conference in Canberra, last week.
ANSTO to contribute to research on Next Gen Nuclear Energy Systems
ANSTO contributes to new international project to improve how the world assesses the economic viability of Small Modular Reactors
Insights into the behaviour of structural materials in a molten salt environment
In Australia and the Southeast Asia basin, the ANSTO facility offers a wide range of unique nuclear-beam techniques for cultural heritage research.
Australia’s Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) is well-known for facilitating incredible science and creating life-saving nuclear medicines, but for the last 40 years it’s been quietly producing a largely unsung net zero hero: Neutron Transmutation Doped (NTD) silicon.
ANSTO is interested finding students to collaborate on Generation IV reactor systems.
The Australian Government recently announced $30 million to design a new world-leading nuclear medicine manufacturing facility at ANSTO’s Lucas Heights campus, and replace and an ageing facility.