Graduate profile - Amy MacIntosh
Environmental Scientist Amy Macintosh is researching the impact of the petroleum industry on Australian marine life.
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Environmental Scientist Amy Macintosh is researching the impact of the petroleum industry on Australian marine life.
ANSTO plays a leading role in measuring and characterising fine particles from a range of locations around Australia and internationally.
Think Science! 2025 Summary and results
China’s vertical sandstone pillars studied using nuclear techniques
Your students can analyse real research data from ANSTO scientists.
Beamtime Guide on the X-ray Fluorescence Microscopy beamline at the Australian Synchrotron.
The Australian Synchrotron is a source of powerful X-rays and infrared radiation that can be used for a wide range of scientific and technical purposes. Synchrotron X-rays are millions of times brighter than those produced by conventional X-ray machines in laboratories and hospitals.
ANSTO has produced a comprehensive report for the NSW Department of Planning and Environment that represents a significant scientific investigation of the connections, pathways and processes of water loss from the Thirlmere Lakes system.
High intensity X-ray beam provides insights into the activity of natural killer cells.
Publications and resources from the Powder Diffraction beamline.
ANSTO is taking its innovative ANSTO Synroc® and CORIS360® technologies to the world stage at the Waste Management Symposia 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona USA this week (10 – 14 March 2024). Joining over 45 other countries and around 3,000 attendees, an Australian Government contingent comprising of ANSTO and the Australian Radioactive Waste Agency is in attendance to showcase Australia’s extensive radioactive waste management capabilities.
This scholarship recognises outstanding ability and promise in the field of nuclear science and technology, specifically as it applies to nuclear energy. Successful applicants will demonstrate a history of interest in nuclear energy and a desire to continue this interest.
Scientists at ANSTO characterise structures with atomic detail using probes such as x-rays, electrons, neutrons and ions.
ANSTO researchers are investigating nuclear propulsion systems for applications on the sea and in space.
The User Advisory Committee (UAC) are pleased to present this year's invited speakers.
Highlights of the Magnetism Project.
In an effort to understand why the Tongan Hunga volcano eruption was so explosive, internationally-recognised volcanologist Prof. Shane Cronin of the University of Auckland and associates rely on beamlines at the Australian Synchrotron to support comprehensive research on the Hunga event.