Showing 881 - 900 of 1460 results
Australia steps up to prevent a world nuclear medicine shortfall
ANSTO Air quality monitoring in the Port Kembla area
Site-wide emergency evacuation exercise held
Significant milestone for Australia's new nuclear medicine manufacturing plant
Combining irradiation and lithography to engineer advanced conducting materials
Sutherland Shire locals invited to become ANSTO Citizen Scientists
Dr Peter Kappen manages the Spectroscopy Group at the Australian Synchrotron.
Celebrating Australian women in nuclear
Highlighting the contribution of four inspirational ANSTO leaders on International Women's Day.
Mr Michael Quigley is an experienced director, senior business executive and former engineer. He has extensive corporate, financial and governance experience across the public and private sectors.
Jarosite on Earth and Mars
Useful in some mineral processes but a major problem in others, jarosite may be the key to unlocking the geological history and environmental context of water on Mars.
Producing fish oil without odour and a longer shelf life
Research undertaken by Flinders University, the University of Cincinnati (US), Guangzhou University (China) and ANSTO has evaluated a new process to encapsulate fish oil in nanoparticles
Searching for skyrmions
Neutron scattering helps clarify the arrangement of magnetic vortices, skyrmions, in material
Understanding pollutants impact
Research highlights how biodistribution of a toxic substance essential to understand all exposure risks.
Radiocarbon is a powerful tracer for ocean circulation and climate studies
Radiocarbon analyses on corals from two sites in Australian waters of the southwest (SW) Pacific has indicated significant changes in ocean circulation in the Pacific and large climate variability during the early to mid-Holocene period (8,000-5,400 years ago).
A step closer to understanding superconductivity with large international collaboration
New grant introduces state-of-the-art capability in stress engineering for Australian industry
New facility will greatly enhance Australia’s capability in stress engineering for industry
Japanese scientists collaborate on self-healing ceramics for nuclear reactors
ANSTO researchers have taken up the challenge to develop a coating for the cladding used in nuclear reactors to prevent it from taking up hydrogen and releasing it if temperatures get too high and repair itself if damaged.
Research confirms that ancient Tasmania was not a ‘wilderness’ but an Indigenous cultural landscape
Recent studies led by the University of Melbourne have revealed that the Palawa people’s ancient land stewardship techniques have profoundly shaped the landscape of western Lutruwita, within the traditional territories located in Tasmania.
Research explores how the magnetic moments of atoms in materials are arranged and interact
The unique magnetic properties and nontrivial quantum effects were observed and measured in an advanced material with potential application for quantum computing.