Managing Radioactive Waste
ANSTO has safely managed its radioactive waste for over 60 years. Waste is managed in accordance with national and international standards.
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ANSTO has safely managed its radioactive waste for over 60 years. Waste is managed in accordance with national and international standards.
Creative ideas are the spark for great innovations: this week students from across Australia got to share their ideas through ANSTO’s Big Ideas Forum.
ANSTO’s Australian Synchrotron has been working on an initiative that could substantially improve radiotherapy treatment for cancer patients.
Nuclear engineer, Robert Mardus-Hall, with his research partner Andrew Pastrello, are developing nuclear power based solutions for space missions to the Moon and Mars.
A team of ANSTO health researchers, staff at the Centre for Accelerator Science and Dr Melanie Ferlazzo, a postdoc from the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM), and scientists from the French Space Agency (CNES), are collaborating on investigations to determine the impact of secondary particles on human cells using the new microprobe beamline at ANSTO’s Centre for Accelerator Science.
Experts at ANSTO’s Australian Synchrotron are prioritising work that could hold the key to fast-tracking the development of a vaccine for COVID-19.
ANSTO waste management services meet regulatory requirements and international best practice standards.
Research to determine the potential dose from long- lived radioactive substances at mining, legacy sites and nuclear facilities.
ANSTO undertakes research on Australia's water resources to inform more sustainable water management practices.
Using the OPAL multipurpose reactor,, ANSTO can provide a diverse suite of radioisotopes for research and applications
Project Bright, the construction of eight new beamlines at ANSTO’s Australian Synchrotron has reached a milestone by achieving ‘First Light’ for the new micro-computed tomography (MCT) beamline in late NovembeR.
Resources and a list of user publications associated with Infrared microspectroscopy.
A new continuous record of temperature dating back 12,000 years provides an import resource in understanding current and future climate changes,
Neutron and gamma ghost imaging are important scientific developments reported in two publications, and the subject of an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant awarded to a team that includes ANSTO scientists