Vice President of the German Parliament visits
Wolfgang Kubicki, MdB and a small delegation visited to see the Spatz neutron instrument donated by Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin (HZB) and discuss research.
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Wolfgang Kubicki, MdB and a small delegation visited to see the Spatz neutron instrument donated by Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin (HZB) and discuss research.
New facility will greatly enhance Australia’s capability in stress engineering for industry
Mia is in her second year of Mechatronics Engineering at the University of Wollongong. She has worked at ANSTO, in the first cohort of the engineering cadetship program, since July 2024.
Proposals to Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering and National Deuteration Facility closed
Research portfolio and future expansion of Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering discussed
Australian Centre for Neutorn Scattering - National Deuteration Facility Advisory Committee meets
This week palaeontologists from Curtin University announced that a specimen from the collection of the Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum in Winton Queensland as the first near complete skull of a sauropod, a massive, long-tailed, long-necked, small-headed plant-eating dinosaur, found in Australia and other parts of the world.
ANSTO will participate in a New Zealand Marsden project which will search for chemical clues linked to the origins of life on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon.
Australia part of global renaissance in fusion power research symbolised by ITER experiment
A large international team has provided an understanding of how nanoscale interactions affect the thermal stability of a type of next generation organic solar cells.
The ANSTO Awards in Nuclear Science and Technology 2018 were presented on Friday 2 November at The Australian Museum, and showcased ANSTO’s unique nuclear science and technology capabilities, which enable progress in the key areas of health research and innovation for industry.
Over the last decades, neutron, photon, and ion beams have been established as an innovative and attractive investigative approach to characterise cultural-heritage materials.
Highlights of the Energy Materials Project.
A paper led by researchers at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) published in the PNAS last year has confirmed the theory that echidnas and platypuses descended from an aquatic ancestor with fossil evidence.
Jacob is currently an engineering & Physics intern working with the Australian centre for neutron Scattering (ACNS) here at Ansto. He is a third-year engineering Mechatronics student and final year physics student at QUT up in Brisbane.