Brookhaven Lab, Stony Brook University Scientists Present Catalysis Research Opportunities at NSLS-II
In the March 31 online edition of Synchrotron Radiation News, an article authored by a group of researchers from U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory and Stony Brook University describes the research opportunities and tools available (or coming soon) to catalysis scientists at Brookhaven's new state-of the-art synchrotron facility, the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II), a DOE Office of Science User Facility.
Read more about Brookhaven Lab, Stony Brook University Scientists Present Catalysis Research Opportunities at NSLS-IIPredictive Power: CASL aids startup of TVA’s Watts Bar Unit 2
Researchers at Oak Ridge National Lab carried out the largest time-dependent simulation of a nuclear power plant to date, confirming engineers’ predictions related to the safe and reliable operation of the Watts Bar Unit 2 (WB2) nuclear power plant.
Read more about Predictive Power: CASL aids startup of TVA’s Watts Bar Unit 2Rare Supernova Discovery Ushers in New Era for Cosmology
With the help of an automated supernova-hunting pipeline, developed by Berkeley Lab astrophysicists, and a galaxy sitting 2 billion light years away from Earth that’s acting as a “magnifying glass,’’ astronomers have captured multiple images of a Type Ia supernova—the brilliant explosion of a star—appearing in four different locations on the sky.
Read more about Rare Supernova Discovery Ushers in New Era for CosmologyA Real CAM-Do Attitude
A team of researchers, including one from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, used supercomputing to understand processes leading to increased drought resistance in food and fuel crops.
Read more about A Real CAM-Do AttitudeChanging the game
Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Lab unlock hardware's hidden talent for rendering 3D graphics for science — and video games.
Read more about Changing the gameAmes Laboratory Hosts its First Office of Science Graduate Student Program Researcher
To fund her research at Ames Laboratory, Elizabeth Wille applied for a supplemental award through the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science Graduate Student Research (SCGSR) program. SCGSR’s program prepares graduate student recipients for science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) careers critical to the DOE Office of Science mission.
Read more about Ames Laboratory Hosts its First Office of Science Graduate Student Program ResearcherQ&A with CFN User Davood Shahrjerdi
Combining the unique properties of emerging nanomaterials with advanced silicon-based electronics, NYU's Shahrjerdi engineers nano-bioelectronics.
Read more about Q&A with CFN User Davood ShahrjerdiBetter Living Through Pressure: Functional Nanomaterials Made Easy
Using pressure instead of chemicals, a Sandia National Laboratories team has fabricated nanoparticles into nanowire-array structures similar to those that underlie the surfaces of touch-screens for sensors, computers, phones and TVs.
Read more about Better Living Through Pressure: Functional Nanomaterials Made EasyStudy on Impact of Climate Change on Snowpack
An international team of scientists, including one from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), has found that up to 20 percent loss in the annual maximum amount of water contained in the Western United States' mountain snowpack in the last three decades is due to human influence.
Read more about Study on Impact of Climate Change on SnowpackDustin Leverman: A Unique Route to HPC Systems
Leverman is the HPC storage system administrator for the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF), a DOE Office of Science User Facility located at ORNL. He spends his days assisting users with performance problems and ensuring reliability of the day-to-day operations of the file system, which contains information generated by the OLCF’s flagship supercomputer, Titan.
Read more about Dustin Leverman: A Unique Route to HPC SystemsTweaking a Molecule's Structure Can Send it Down a Different Path to Crystallization
Insights into crystallization pathways gained by scientists at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory could eventually design of a variety of products with more predictive control over the design and assembly of biomimetic materials.
Read more about Tweaking a Molecule's Structure Can Send it Down a Different Path to CrystallizationHow X-rays Pushed Topological Matter Research Over the Top
While using X-rays generated by the Advanced Light Source (ALS), a synchrotron facility at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), to study a bismuth-containing thermoelectric material that can convert heat into electricity, physicist M. Zahid Hasan of Princeton University spawned a revolution in materials research.
Read more about How X-rays Pushed Topological Matter Research Over the Top