Topping Off a Telescope with New Tools to Explore Dark Energy
Key components of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument are installed after months of planning, prep work
Read more about Topping Off a Telescope with New Tools to Explore Dark EnergyTo Curb Maternal Deaths in Developing Countries, Researchers Use X-rays to Map a Lifesaving Drug in Action
New research will help in the quest to design low-cost drugs that can tackle postpartum bleeding and other conditions without severe side effects.
Read more about To Curb Maternal Deaths in Developing Countries, Researchers Use X-rays to Map a Lifesaving Drug in ActionScience Up-Close: Blasting Molecules with Extreme X-Rays
To better understand how damage from high-energy X-rays affects imaging, researchers shot the most powerful X-ray laser in the world at a series of atoms and molecules.
Read more about Science Up-Close: Blasting Molecules with Extreme X-RaysMatthew Ryder: Understanding the Stability of Next-Generation Materials
Scientists and engineers are always searching for ways to solve the world’s biggest challenges, such as reducing carbon emissions, creating more effective cancer treatments, and increasing energy efficiency in electronics.
Read more about Matthew Ryder: Understanding the Stability of Next-Generation MaterialsA New ARM Pilot Signs Up
Combat veteran, pilot, athlete, aircraft entrepreneur and executive Jennifer Armstrong is the first woman to fly ARM’s Gulfstream-159 research aircraft
Read more about A New ARM Pilot Signs UpU.S. Department of Energy and Italy’s Ministry of Education, Universities, and Research to Collaborate on Particle Accelerator Construction
Agreement launches a multinational collaboration to build a powerful new accelerator at DOE’s Fermilab complex.
Read more about U.S. Department of Energy and Italy’s Ministry of Education, Universities, and Research to Collaborate on Particle Accelerator ConstructionUsing Hydrogen Ions to Manipulate Magnetism on the Molecular Scale
A team of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory has determined how to use hydrogen ions, “pumped” from water in the air at room temperature, to electrically control magnetism within a very thin sample of a magnetic material. This approach for manipulating magnetic properties could speed up advances in computing, sensors, and other technologies.
Read more about Using Hydrogen Ions to Manipulate Magnetism on the Molecular ScaleResearchers Demonstrate New Building Block in Quantum Computing
Researchers with the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have demonstrated a new level of control over photons encoded with quantum information.
Read more about Researchers Demonstrate New Building Block in Quantum ComputingArgonne Works to Preserve Birds, Aircraft and Cultural Heritage in South Korea
Argonne researchers discovered how to keep birds and pilots at a safe distance to avoid run-ins at air force bases.
Read more about Argonne Works to Preserve Birds, Aircraft and Cultural Heritage in South KoreaNeutron Production at ORNL's SNS Reaches Design Power Level
The Spallation Neutron Source at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has broken a new record by ending its first neutron production cycle in fiscal year 2019 at its design power level of 1.4 megawatts.
Read more about Neutron Production at ORNL's SNS Reaches Design Power LevelThe Future of Fighting Cancer: Zapping Tumors in Less than a Second
SLAC and Stanford researchers secure support for two projects that share one goal: to reduce the side effects of radiation therapy by vastly shrinking the length of a typical session.
Read more about The Future of Fighting Cancer: Zapping Tumors in Less than a SecondFIONA Measures the Mass Number of 2 Superheavy Elements: Moscovium and Nihonium
First results from Berkeley Lab’s new tool confirm predicted measurements
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