
Data sets
Your students can analyse real research data from ANSTO scientists.
Showing 281 - 298 of 298 results
Your students can analyse real research data from ANSTO scientists.
An international team led by ANSTO has been awarded a prestigious program grant from the Foundation for Australia-Japan Studies.
Restoring soil carbon can bring benefits for agricultural productivity and climate change mitigation.
In Australia and the Southeast Asia basin, the ANSTO facility offers a wide range of unique nuclear-beam techniques for cultural heritage research.
Researchers from ANSTO and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory have uncovered the likely mineral composition of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, revealing a world of exotic organic crystals unlike any found on Earth.
Dr Rezwanul Haque, now a senior lecturer at the University of the Sunshine Coast, received a national Young Scientist Award for his earlier research using nuclear techniques at ANSTO’s Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering to find cracks and signs of stress in riveted joints in sheet metal in car bodies.
In part 1 of this two-part series, ANSTO scientists from across the organisation became film critics to review Christopher Nolan’s new movie, Oppenheimer, which explores the life of the director of the Manhattan Project to develop an atomic weapon.
Pioneering work on materials for energy production, such as lithium ion batteries, has made ANSTO a centre of specialist capabilities and expertise.
Using nuclear techniques to help sustain Australia's finite groundwater resources
ANSTO User Meeting 2021 - Speakers
Over the last decades, neutron, photon, and ion beams have been established as an innovative and attractive investigative approach to characterise cultural-heritage materials.
Read about an ANSTO scientist and their work to prepare for a school project or interview.
Publications by ANSTO's National Deuteration Facility.
Publications and resources from the Powder Diffraction beamline.