#LabChat: What is Dark Energy? Oct 25 at 2pm ET
Join researchers from three Office of Science labs to learn more about dark energy, the mysterious and ubiquitous force driving the accelerating expansion of the universe.
Read more about #LabChat: What is Dark Energy? Oct 25 at 2pm ETTraining Your Robot the PaR-PaR Way
Berkeley Lab and JBEI Researchers Develop a Biology-Friendly Robot Programming Language.
Read more about Training Your Robot the PaR-PaR WayState-of-the-Art Beams From Table-Top Accelerators
Berkeley Lab’s lead in laser plasma acceleration research continues with new benchmarks for electron beam quality.
Read more about State-of-the-Art Beams From Table-Top AcceleratorsBatteries May Fade . . . But Research Renews
Pacific Northwest National Lab puts a new light on old batteries.
Read more about Batteries May Fade . . . But Research RenewsBright Lights and Liquid Bridges
Argonne Lab's Advanced Photon Source shows how floating water bridges defy gravity.
Read more about Bright Lights and Liquid BridgesDepartment of Energy's Office of Science Director to Discuss Science for Sustainable Energy at First-Ever Visit to Virginia Tech
The Director of the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science — the largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the nation — will talk about challenges related to energy use and global warming during his first-ever visit to Virginia Tech on Wednesday, Oct. 17.
Read more about Department of Energy's Office of Science Director to Discuss Science for Sustainable Energy at First-Ever Visit to Virginia TechAnother Advance on the Road to Spintronics
Berkeley Lab Researchers Unlock Ferromagnetic Secrets of Promising Materials.
Read more about Another Advance on the Road to SpintronicsAdventures in Science and Explorations at Berkeley
Thousands stopped by the Office of Science booth at Berkeley Lab's Open House. Click here to view photos of the event.
Read more about Adventures in Science and Explorations at BerkeleyEnergizing the Future
Better batteries are being built at the Office of Science's Argonne National Lab.
Read more about Energizing the FutureAdvanced Photon Source lights the way to 2012 Chemistry Nobel
ARGONNE, Ill. — Thanks in part to research performed at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded today to Americans Brian Kobilka and Robert Lefkowitz for their work on G-protein-coupled receptors.
Read more about Advanced Photon Source lights the way to 2012 Chemistry NobelAdaptable Button Mushroom Serves Up Biomass-Degrading Genes Critical to Managing the Planet’s Carbon Stores
The button mushroom occupies a prominent place in our diet and in the grocery store where it boasts a tasty multibillion-dollar niche, while in nature, Agaricus bisporus is known to decay leaf matter on the forest floor. Now, owing to an international collaboration of two-dozen institutions led by the French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA) and the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI), the full repertoire of A. bisporus genes has been determined.
Read more about Adaptable Button Mushroom Serves Up Biomass-Degrading Genes Critical to Managing the Planet’s Carbon StoresPanofsky Prize Honors Researchers' Underground Hunt for Dark Matter
The search for dark matter runs deep with physicists Blas Cabrera and Bernard Sadoulet, who have chased this mystery far underground and will be recognized for their work as joint recipients of the 2013 W.K.H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Particle Physics.
Read more about Panofsky Prize Honors Researchers' Underground Hunt for Dark Matter