Ames Laboratory to Receive $3 Million to Develop Instrument to Study Plant Cell Walls
A team of scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory will be developing new instrumentation aimed at determining the chemical and structural makeup of plant cell walls to better understand how to convert plant material into bio-energy.
Read more about Ames Laboratory to Receive $3 Million to Develop Instrument to Study Plant Cell WallsScientists Find Static "Stripes" of Electrical Charge in Copper-Oxide Superconductor
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have demonstrated that static, as opposed to fluctuating, charge stripes coexist with superconductivity in a cuprate when lanthanum and barium are added in certain amounts.
Read more about Scientists Find Static "Stripes" of Electrical Charge in Copper-Oxide SuperconductorCrystal Clear Imaging: Infrared Brings to Light Nanoscale Molecular Arrangement
A team of researchers working at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has demonstrated infrared imaging of an organic semiconductor known for its electronics capabilities, revealing key nanoscale details about the nature of its crystal shapes and orientations, and defects that also affect its performance.
Read more about Crystal Clear Imaging: Infrared Brings to Light Nanoscale Molecular ArrangementPlanetarium Show Brings ‘Phantom’ Matter to Life
Berkeley Lab collaborated with other national labs, universities, and international research institutions on the production of a new planetarium show, “Phantom of the Universe,” designed to immerse audiences in the search for dark matter.
Read more about Planetarium Show Brings ‘Phantom’ Matter to LifeNano-Spike Catalyst Convert Carbon Dioxide Directly into Ethanol
In a new twist to waste-to-fuel technology, scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed an electrochemical process that uses tiny spikes of carbon and copper to turn carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, into ethanol. Their finding, which involves nanofabrication and catalysis science, was serendipitous.
Read more about Nano-Spike Catalyst Convert Carbon Dioxide Directly into EthanolSUE Lends a Hand: Field Museum Scientists Remove T. rex’s Arm for Argonne Study
Two Field Museum scientists are leaving their labs and going face-to-face with SUE, the biggest Tyrannosaurus rex ever discovered, armed only with a wrench. And they’re going to take her arm off.
Read more about SUE Lends a Hand: Field Museum Scientists Remove T. rex’s Arm for Argonne StudyStill No 'Sterile' Neutrinos, But the Search Goes On
Reports of the non-existence of the so-called “sterile” neutrino are premature, say scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory—even as they release results from two experiments that further limit the places this elusive particle may be hiding.
Read more about Still No 'Sterile' Neutrinos, But the Search Goes OnNew Equipment Allows Ames Laboratory and ISU Researchers to Simulate Commercial Materials Processing
Researchers at Iowa State University and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory have a new tool to help understand and fine-tune the processing of materials in a variety of commercial techniques.
Read more about New Equipment Allows Ames Laboratory and ISU Researchers to Simulate Commercial Materials ProcessingALCF Summer Student Projects Tackle Real-World Problems
Dominique Hoskin took an important first step towards a future career in designing commercial aircrafts by spending his summer working with high-performance computing (HPC) codes at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility.
Read more about ALCF Summer Student Projects Tackle Real-World ProblemsSNS Accelerator Celebrates 10 Years of Leading the Way
The first of its kind superconducting linear particle accelerator (LINAC) built for the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory is now celebrating 10 years of successful operations.
Read more about SNS Accelerator Celebrates 10 Years of Leading the WaySmallest. Transistor. Ever.
A research team led by faculty scientist Ali Javey at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has created a transistor with a working 1-nanometer gate. For comparison, a strand of human hair is about 50,000 nanometers thick.
Read more about Smallest. Transistor. Ever.The Incredible Shrinking Particle Accelerator
WarpIV, a new data analysis/visualization toolkit developed at Berkeley Lab, is designed to help speed particle accelerator research and design by enabling in situ visualization and analysis of accelerator simulations at scale
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