Making Glass Invisible: A Nanoscience-Based Disappearing Act
Scientists at the Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN)—a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory—have demonstrated a method for reducing the surface reflections from glass surfaces to nearly zero by etching tiny nanoscale features into them.
Read more about Making Glass Invisible: A Nanoscience-Based Disappearing ActAllison McComiskey Searches the Skies for Aerosol Answers
After 15 years in the field and at the computer, Allison McComiskey is group chief of the global radiation section within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Global Monitoring Division.
Read more about Allison McComiskey Searches the Skies for Aerosol AnswersCelebrate the Unseen: Attend a Dark Matter Day Event
The events, planned on and around the formally recognized day on October 31, 2017, will engage the public in discussions about dark matter, which together with dark energy makes up about 95 percent of the mass and energy in our universe. Though we know through its gravitational effects that dark matter greatly dwarfs the visible matter in our universe, we know little about it.
Read more about Celebrate the Unseen: Attend a Dark Matter Day EventUnique High-brilliance X-ray Sheds New Light on Additive Manufacturing Process
AFRL Composite Materials and Processing team researchers used the ultra-bright X-ray at the National Synchrotron Light Source II at Brookhaven National Laboratory to gain better insight into the bonding of composite layers during the additive manufacturing process.
Read more about Unique High-brilliance X-ray Sheds New Light on Additive Manufacturing ProcessWhite Rot Fungi’s Size Explained by Breadth of Gene Families Involved
An international team led by László G. Nagy of the Biological Research Center at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and including researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI), a DOE Office of Science User Facility, sequenced and analyzed four Armillaria fungi, including A. ostoyae, and then compared these genomes with those of related fungi to better understand the evolution of Armillaria’s abilities to spread and infect, and effectively break down all components of plant cell walls.
Read more about White Rot Fungi’s Size Explained by Breadth of Gene Families InvolvedNSLS-II User Profiles: Riccardo Comin
Riccardo Comin is an Assistant Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he leads the Photon Scattering Laboratory in the division of Condensed Matter Experiments. He performs studies on quantum materials using the Coherent Soft X-Ray scattering beamline, 23-ID-1, at the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility at Brookhaven Lab.
Read more about NSLS-II User Profiles: Riccardo CominA Spark in the Dark
The cosmological search in the dark is no walk in the park. With help from Berkeley Lab’s NERSC, Fermilab aims open-source software at data from high-energy physics.
Read more about A Spark in the DarkField of Meteorologists’ Dreams
With more than 200 instruments, the Southern Great Plains (SGP) atmospheric observatory is the world’s largest and most extensive climate research facility. This year, the site celebrates 25 years of operations, helping scientists gain vital insights into the Earth’s cloud, aerosol and atmospheric processes.
Read more about Field of Meteorologists’ Dreams2017 R&D 100 Awards
Celebrating the R&D 100 Award Finalists from Office of Science National Laboratories
Read more about 2017 R&D 100 AwardsNeutrons Improve Weld Integrity of Underwater Wind Turbine Foundations
Professors Michael Joachim Andreassen from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) and Zhenzhen Yu from the Colorado School of Mines are using neutron analysis at the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) to investigate residual stresses expected to occur in the welds of offshore underwater wind turbine foundations.
Read more about Neutrons Improve Weld Integrity of Underwater Wind Turbine FoundationsGenome Research Challenges Previous Understanding of the Origin of Photosynthesis
Plant biologists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), in collaboration with colleagues from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), have reconstructed the evolutionary history of photosynthesis to provide new insight into the yet-unfolding story of its origins.
Read more about Genome Research Challenges Previous Understanding of the Origin of PhotosynthesisCloud Radar Simulator Bridges Gap Between Climate Models and Field Data
The simulator bridges differences between climate model-simulated clouds and ARM radar observations in how they address spatial scale and properties of liquid and solid water in the atmosphere. The new tool has been incorporated into the Cloud Feedback Model Intercomparison Project Observation Simulator Package (COSP), a community satellite simulator package.
Read more about Cloud Radar Simulator Bridges Gap Between Climate Models and Field Data