Nuclear medicine congress
Congress marks watershed moment for nuclear medicine and ANSTO
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Congress marks watershed moment for nuclear medicine and ANSTO
Clarity Pharmaceuticals is building on comprehensive work on chelators carried out at ANSTO.
Environmental Scientist Amy Macintosh is researching the impact of the petroleum industry on Australian marine life.
New technology is being developed in Sydney to recycle used Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and turn it into raw materials for 3D printing.
Understanding the molecular structure of ingredients can improve the qualities of food.
Specifications, Beryllium Filter, User Manual, Instrument reference
More than 3,200 solar panels have been installed across the rooftops of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation’s (ANSTO) Australian Synchrotron in Clayton, offsetting enough power to light up the whole MCG for more than five years.
An international team led by scientists at City University of Hong Kong has found flexible metal-organic framework (MOF) with one-dimensional channels that acts as a “molecular trapdoor” to selectively adsorb gases, such as carbon dioxide, in response to temperature and pressure changes.
A groundbreaking international study has provided new insights into global fossil methane emissions, using innovative multi-isotopic atmospheric measurements.
ARPANSA has given ANSTO approval to begin testing the neutron reflectometer, Spatz
Research to understand how contaminants move through the soil and affect ecosystems and humans as well estimating emissions.
It’s been one year since nandin opened its doors. Let's take a look back at what we've achieved so far before setting our sights on the future.
Our research group carries out fundamental research uniquely applied to industrial problems in the areas of uranium, rare earth and lithium processing.
ANSTO provides a range of radiotracers for pre-clinical and clinical research using the OPAL multipurpose reactor. Users can access more than 300 known radiotracers. If a starting material is provided, new and non-commercial radiotracers can be produced.
Accommodation Information
Over the last decades, neutron, photon, and ion beams have been established as an innovative and attractive investigative approach to characterise cultural-heritage materials.
ANSTO scientist, Dr Klaus Wilcken of the Centre for Accelerator Science, used cosmogenic nuclide dating to determine the ages of layered sand and gravel samples, in which seven footprints of the flightless bird, the moa, were found on the South Island in New Zealand in 2019.