Mapping the universe in 3-D: Fermilab contributes to the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is contributing specialty systems for the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument project, to collect the galactic light by recording approximately 35 million galaxies and quasars to create a 3-D map of one-third of the entire sky.
Read more about Mapping the universe in 3-D: Fermilab contributes to the Dark Energy Spectroscopic InstrumentAlgorithm Provides Early Warning System for Tracking Groundwater Contamination
Scientists at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and Savannah River National Laboratory have developed a low-cost method for real-time monitoring of pollutants using commonly available sensors.
Read more about Algorithm Provides Early Warning System for Tracking Groundwater ContaminationFour New DOE Early Career Research Program Award Winners Plan to Use ARM Measurements
Susannah Burrows of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Naruki Hiranuma of West Texas A&M University, Kerri Pratt of the University of Michigan, and ManishKumar Shrivastava of PNNL will use ARM measurements as part of their work through 2018 U.S. Department of Energy Early Career Research Program awards.
Read more about Four New DOE Early Career Research Program Award Winners Plan to Use ARM MeasurementsTransforming Gas into Fuels with Better Alloys
A Multiscale Computational Catalysis & Materials Science group led by Michail Stamatakis at the University College London used the high-performance computing resources at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility to look at a new catalyst for producing fuels.
Read more about Transforming Gas into Fuels with Better AlloysUT-ORNL Team Makes First Particle Accelerator Beam Measurement in Six Dimensions
The first full characterization measurement of an accelerator beam in six dimensions will advance the understanding and performance of current and planned accelerators around the world.
Read more about UT-ORNL Team Makes First Particle Accelerator Beam Measurement in Six DimensionsFrom Hurricane Katrina Victim to Presidential Awardee: A SUNO Professor's Award-Winning Mentoring Efforts
A decade-plus collaboration between Brookhaven Lab and Southern University at New Orleans (SUNO) provides minority undergraduate students with hands-on opportunities to learn about natural resource management while developing the foundations for graduate studies.
Read more about From Hurricane Katrina Victim to Presidential Awardee: A SUNO Professor's Award-Winning Mentoring EffortsSNS Completes Full Neutron Production Cycle at Record Power Level
The Spallation Neutron Source at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has reached a new milestone by operating a complete neutron production run cycle at 1.3 megawatts.
Read more about SNS Completes Full Neutron Production Cycle at Record Power LevelHotter Temperatures Extend Growing Season for Peatland Plants
A futuristic experiment simulating warmer environmental conditions has shown that peatland vegetation responds to higher temperatures with an earlier and longer growth period.
Read more about Hotter Temperatures Extend Growing Season for Peatland PlantsLauren Garrison: Testing Materials for the Future of Fusion
Lauren Garrison, a Weinberg Fellow in the Nuclear Materials Science and Technology Group at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is a fusion materials researcher currently collaborating with Japanese researchers on Project PHENIX, an experiment designed to evaluate tungsten and tungsten-based materials for possible use in future fusion reactors.
Read more about Lauren Garrison: Testing Materials for the Future of FusionScientists ‘Squeeze’ Nanocrystals in a Liquid Droplet Into a Solid-Like State – and Back Again
A team led by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) found a way to make a liquid-like state behave more like a solid, and then to reverse the process.
Read more about Scientists ‘Squeeze’ Nanocrystals in a Liquid Droplet Into a Solid-Like State – and Back AgainLining Up the Surprising Behaviors of a Superconductor with One of the World's Strongest Magnets
Scientists have discovered that the electrical resistance of a copper-oxide compound depends on the magnetic field in a very unusual way—a finding that could help direct the search for materials that can perfectly conduct electricity at room temperature.
Read more about Lining Up the Surprising Behaviors of a Superconductor with One of the World's Strongest MagnetsA Dual-phase DUNE
The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment is advancing technology commonly used in dark matter experiments—and scaling it up to record-breaking sizes.
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