Global research team discovers magnetic order in quasicrystals
ANSTO has contributed to international research on quasicrystals that opens the door to tailored magnetic materials.
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ANSTO has contributed to international research on quasicrystals that opens the door to tailored magnetic materials.
Lithium Australia, a company that has a close association with ANSTO’s business unit Minerals, has been awarded a US patent for its unique lithium mining technology SiLeach®.
A long-standing collaboration led biomedical researchers from the University of Sydney has recently achieved success with the recent announcement of an innovative bone implant that significantly reduces rejection and inflammation.
Experiments undertaken at the Australian Synchrotron have allowed research teams from Monash University and La Trobe University to clarify fundamental aspects of T-cell activation crucial to the body’s immune response to disease.
Both the Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering and the National Deuteration Facility share in grants
ANSTO expertise provides much-needed information about groundwater resources in the Mozambique capital and district.
ANSTO completed an international overnight dash for nuclear medicine earlier this week, chartering three planes to get potentially life-saving children’s cancer treatments from Japan to hospitals across Australia.
Scientists from Monash, ANSTo and China have developed an ultra-thin membrane that could separate harmful ions from water or capture gases.
Potential new treatments and tools for depression under development.
Research has helped build a record of rainfall during the late Pleistocene and Holocene, and shed light on the strategies of Indigenous Australians to cope with a changing landscape.
Restoring soil carbon can bring benefits for agricultural productivity and climate change mitigation.
ANSTO environmental scientists contribute to investigation of carbon capture in wetlands.
Applications are now being accepted for the Industry foundations Scholarship.
After careful selection, three Australian science teachers are set to fly to Geneva today after winning positions on the International High School Teacher Programme at CERN.