Berkeley Lab Pioneer in Synchrotron Techniques and Tools Receives DOE Secretary’s Award
Zahid Hussain, a longtime scientist at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), has always been more focused on achievements than accolades, though his lists run long in both categories.
Read more about Berkeley Lab Pioneer in Synchrotron Techniques and Tools Receives DOE Secretary’s AwardScientists Team Up With Industry to Mass-Produce Detectors for Next-Gen Cosmic Experiment
Chasing clues about the infant universe in relic light known as the cosmic microwave background, or CMB, scientists are devising more elaborate and ultrasensitive detector arrays to measure the properties of this light with increasing precision.
Read more about Scientists Team Up With Industry to Mass-Produce Detectors for Next-Gen Cosmic ExperimentFielding Scientific Questions with Natalie Griffiths
Growing up, Natalie Griffiths dreamed of playing shortstop for the Toronto Blue Jays. With a stint on the Canadian national women’s baseball team under her belt, Griffiths has retired her glove and now fields scientific questions about carbon and nutrient cycling and water quality as an aquatic ecologist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Read more about Fielding Scientific Questions with Natalie GriffithsBrookhaven's CFN Celebrates Decade of Discovery
The Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN)—a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility located at Brookhaven National Laboratory and one of five Nanoscale Science Research Centers (NSRCs) built at DOE national laboratories—marked its first “Decade of Discovery” with a day-long celebration on Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2018.
Read more about Brookhaven's CFN Celebrates Decade of DiscoveryClarice Phelps: Dedicated Service to Science and Community
More than 70 years ago, United States Navy Captain Hyman Rickover learned the ins and outs of nuclear science and reactor technology at the Clinton Training School at what would eventually become the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Rickover applied his knowledge towards the creation of the US Navy’s nuclear-powered ships and submarines, earning him the moniker of “father of the nuclear navy.” Decades later, ORNL researchers like Clarice Phelps carry on the Navy Nuke legacy and use their nuclear expertise to solve some of the grand challenges of science.
Read more about Clarice Phelps: Dedicated Service to Science and CommunityA Sneak Peek at 19 Science Simulations for the Summit Supercomputer in 2019
This month, Summit Early Science Program users are starting to work on some of the world’s toughest science problems on its most powerful supercomputer: the 200-petaflop, IBM AC922 Summit system at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF). The OLCF is a US Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility located at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).
Read more about A Sneak Peek at 19 Science Simulations for the Summit Supercomputer in 2019Fiery Sighting: A New Physics of Eruptions That Damage Fusion Experiments
Working together, physicists Ahmed Diallo, an experimentalist, and Julien Dominski, a theorist, pieced together data from the DIII-D National Fusion Facility that General Atomics operates for the DOE in San Diego, to uncover a trigger for a particular type of ELM that does not fit into present models of ELM plasma destabilization.
Read more about Fiery Sighting: A New Physics of Eruptions That Damage Fusion ExperimentsWhen Stars Collide: 3D Computer Simulation Captures Cosmic Event
Neutron stars are the smallest and densest stars, mostly made of elementary particles called neutrons. In August 2017, scientists detected the collision of two neutron stars for the first time by using the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. When two of these stars collide, they merge in a flash of light and debris known as a kilonova, as material explodes outward.
Read more about When Stars Collide: 3D Computer Simulation Captures Cosmic EventPPPL Inventions Take the Spotlight at Technology Showcase
A day-long Technology Showcase spotlighting the unique research, technical expertise, and inventions that the U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory offers to collaborators and funders attracted a wide range of potential partners.
Read more about PPPL Inventions Take the Spotlight at Technology ShowcaseIntestinal Bacteria from Healthy Infants Prevent Food Allergy
Researchers from the University of Chicago, Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Naples Federico II in Italy found that when gut microbes from healthy human infants were transplanted into germ-free mice, the animals were protected from an allergic reaction when exposed to cow’s milk.
Read more about Intestinal Bacteria from Healthy Infants Prevent Food AllergyFound: A Precise Method for Determining How Waves and Particles Affect Fusion Reactions
Like surfers catching ocean waves, particles within the hot, electrically charged state of matter known as plasma can ride waves that oscillate through the plasma during experiments to investigate the production of fusion energy.
Read more about Found: A Precise Method for Determining How Waves and Particles Affect Fusion ReactionsAn Effect that Einstein Helped Discover 100 Years Ago Offers New Insight Into a Puzzling Magnetic Phenomenon
More than 100 years ago, Albert Einstein and Wander Johannes de Haas discovered that when they used a magnetic field to flip the magnetic state of an iron bar dangling from a thread, the bar began to rotate. Now experiments at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have seen for the first time what happens when magnetic materials are demagnetized at ultrafast speeds of millionths of a billionth of a second: The atoms on the surface of the material move, much like the iron bar did. The work, done at SLAC’s Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) X-ray laser, was published in Nature earlier this month.
Read more about An Effect that Einstein Helped Discover 100 Years Ago Offers New Insight Into a Puzzling Magnetic Phenomenon