Showing 121 - 140 of 247 results
Early career researchers feature in Careers with Science publication
Corporate Publications
Explore ANSTO's range of publications and reports available for the public.
Iron and Fire
Using geoarchaeology to reconstruct the history of an ancient Khmer city.
Innovative technology provides enhancement to advanced radiation therapy
Neutron Capture Enhanced Particle Therapy developed at ANSTO.
Fossils go nuclear
A little ANSTO science ingenuity in software helps Mars helicopter flight
ANSTO has made a contribution to the successful NASA/JPL Ingenuity helicopter flight on Mars through instrument scientist, Dr Andrew Nelson, who was one of the many developers of the open-source software SciPy used in the flight.
Safeguarding the future of nuclear medicine production
The Government is safeguarding Australia’s sovereign capability to produce vital nuclear medicines by launching a $30 million project to design a new world-leading manufacturing facility to be built at Lucas Heights in Sydney.
To D or not to D
New screening method developed to confirm if deuteration improves metabolic stability.
Miriad profile - nandin member
Hear from our most recent addition to the nandin Innovation Centre, Tomonori Hu, Founder and CEO of Miriad.
COVID-19 Global NASA hackathon win
ANSTO-nandin innovation hub win global hackathon challenge from NASA with COVID19 solution.
Kimberley rock art dating project
Research will change understanding of Australian Aboriginal rock art found in rock shelters of the Kimberley and its relationship to a changing landscape
Role at ANSTO
Role at ANSTO
Grant funds a search for the precursors of life on icy Titan
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.
Nuclear medicine processing and distribution
ANSTO’s nuclear medicine processing and distribution facility assembles, loads, tests and distributes a range of nuclear medicine products, including Mo-99. The Mo-99 is dispensed into an ANSTO radiopharmaceutical Gentech® Generator where it decays to Tc-99m.
Feathery moa’s fossilised footprints, ancient age revealed
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.
Role at ANSTO
Sydney Access Proposals
View the upcoming proposal deadlines for access to ANSTO’s Research Portal. The User Office provides support for research proposals and enables you to leverage our world-class research infrastructure and facilities.
Scanners to go to a new home after a decade of excellence in preclinical imaging research
Following a decade of imaging to support research and clinical trials at ANSTO and the University of Sydney’s Brain and Mind Centre at Camperdown, two PET scanners have been transferred to the University of Wollongong.