Getting Water to All the Right Places for Carbon Sequestration
Using computer simulations, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's scientists discovered that carbon sequestering minerals can form without water-slurping carbonic acid; rather, a water layer forms on a mineral's surface, leaves atomic voids that carbon dioxide fills, and mineralizes in minutes.
Read more about Getting Water to All the Right Places for Carbon SequestrationAssembling a Flood
Researchers from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California, Berkeley, have developed an assembly program so efficient they believe it could handle output from all the world’s sequencers on just part of one supercomputer.
Read more about Assembling a FloodRare Earths for Life: An 85th Birthday Visit with Mr. Rare Earth
While scientists often talk about their life’s work, few lives have been fuller than that of Ames Laboratory’s Karl A. Gschneidner, Jr. who’s being honored for over six decades of research in the rare-earth metals with a colloquium on his 85th birthday, Monday, Nov. 16.
Read more about Rare Earths for Life: An 85th Birthday Visit with Mr. Rare EarthPPPL to Design a High-Resolution Diagnostic System for the National Ignition Facility
DOE’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) will design a diagnostic system to provide high-resolution analysis of research on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL).
Read more about PPPL to Design a High-Resolution Diagnostic System for the National Ignition FacilityTaking Stock of the Atmosphere
For the next year, a Cessna 206 aircraft from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Climate Research Facility will sweep through the skies multiple times, skimming 500 feet above the Earth’s surface and soaring up to 17,500 feet, allowing scientists to gain an accurate picture of trace gas concentrations in the atmosphere over the ARM Southern Great Plains (SGP) facility.
Read more about Taking Stock of the AtmosphereBrookhaven Lab Presents Cutting-Edge Computing Capabilities at SC15
Exhibiting along with all Department of Energy National Laboratories, Brookhaven will showcase a vision for fast and efficient computing that will enable world-leading science.
Read more about Brookhaven Lab Presents Cutting-Edge Computing Capabilities at SC15INCITE Grants Awarded to 56 Computational Research Projects
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science announced 56 projects aimed at accelerating discovery and innovation to address some of the world’s most challenging scientific questions.
Read more about INCITE Grants Awarded to 56 Computational Research ProjectsOn the Way to Multiband Solar Cells
Researchers at Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division are working to understand and develop a modified solar cell structure that would capture a wider range of available energies across the solar spectrum.
Read more about On the Way to Multiband Solar CellsAtoms to Engines
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, FCA US LLC, and the foundry giant, Nemak of Mexico, are combining their strengths to create lightweight powertrain materials that will help the auto industry speed past the technological roadblocks to its target of 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025.
Read more about Atoms to EnginesMicrobes Map Path Toward Renewable Energy Future
In the quest for renewable fuels, scientists are taking lessons from a humble bacterium that fills our oceans and covers moist surfaces the world over. When blue-green algae captures light to make food using photosynthesis, scientists have found that it simultaneously uses the energy from that captured light to produce hydrogen.
Read more about Microbes Map Path Toward Renewable Energy FutureCinderBio Harnesses Extreme Microbes for Greener Industry
Basic biology research at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has led to the formation of Cinder Biological, or CinderBio, a startup company producing a new class of enzymes made from microbes that thrive in hot volcanic waters.
Read more about CinderBio Harnesses Extreme Microbes for Greener IndustryTitan Takes on Earthquakes
A team led by Thomas Jordan of the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC), headquartered at the University of Southern California (USC), is using the Titan supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) to develop physics-based earthquake simulations to better understand earthquake systems, including the potential seismic hazards from known faults and the impact of strong ground motions on urban areas.
Read more about Titan Takes on Earthquakes