Filter Issues
Publication Date
- (-) 2005 (3)
- (-) 1995 (3)
- (-) 1993 (3)
- (-) 1985 (4)
- (-) 1978 (4)
- (-) 1973 (3)
- 2024 (1)
- 2023 (2)
- 2022 (3)
- 2021 (2)
- 2020 (3)
- 2019 (3)
- 2018 (3)
- 2017 (3)
- 2016 (3)
- 2015 (2)
- 2014 (2)
- 2013 (2)
- 2012 (3)
- 2011 (3)
- 2010 (3)
- 2009 (3)
- 2008 (3)
- 2007 (3)
- 2006 (3)
- 2004 (3)
- 2003 (3)
- 2002 (3)
- 2001 (2)
- 2000 (3)
- 1999 (3)
- 1998 (1)
- 1997 (2)
- 1996 (2)
- 1994 (2)
- 1992 (3)
- 1991 (3)
- 1990 (4)
- 1989 (3)
- 1988 (4)
- 1987 (4)
- 1986 (4)
- 1984 (4)
- 1983 (4)
- 1982 (4)
- 1981 (4)
- 1980 (4)
- 1979 (4)
- 1977 (4)
- 1976 (4)
- 1975 (4)
- 1974 (3)
- 1972 (3)
- 1971 (3)
- 1970 (3)
- 1969 (2)
- 1968 (4)
- 1967 (1)
Vol. 38, No. 3, ( 2005)
The Emerging Nanoscience Revolution- Nanoscience Research at ORNL: Editorial: Joining the Emerging Nanoscience Revolution ... The Next Small Thing ... The Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences ... Neutrons and Nanoscience ... Looking at the World Differently ... Nanoworld Records ... Imaging the Invisible ... A New Attraction ... New Tools for Nanoscience ... Producing Polymers ... A Limitless Potential ... Breaking the Mold ... Researching in Bulk ... Layered Film That Stacks Up ... Catalysis at the Nanoscale ... Nature’s Way ... Nanofabrication in the Clean Room
- Profile: Jim Roberto: Weighing in on Nanoscale Research
- Research Horizons: The “Real” CSI ... Collaboration at a Superfund Site
- Awards: And the Winners Are ...
Vol. 38, No. 2, ( 2005)
Attracting the Next Generation of Great Scientists- Features: Editorial: The Search for New Scientific Superstars ... Filling the Talent Pipeline ... Still Making a Mark ... The Critical Difference ... A Winning Couple ... The Best of Both Worlds ... Mentors and Inventors ... Coming Home ... Finding the Next Small Thing ... The Path of Least Resistance
- Profile: Paul Gilman: Oak Ridge Center for Advanced Studies
- Research Horizons: Superheavy Nuclei: Taking Shape in Theory ... A New Spin
- Awards: And the Winners Are...
Vol. 38, No. 1, ( 2005)
Addressing the World's Energy Challenges- Features: Editorial: An Important Part of the Solution ... Energy Efficiency: Stretching America's Resources ... Energy Prophets: Providing International Solutions ... Energy Prophets: U.S. Oil Dependence ... Aid for the Auto Industry ... Multiple Roads to the Hydrogen Car ... Closer to the Customer ... Pushing the Envelope ... Letting the Sunshine In ... Industry Efficiency ... More Power to the Grid ... Research Tools for the Nation ... Energy Partners
- Profile: John Petersen: Focusing on the UT-ORNL Synergy
- Research Horizons: Fusion: A Big Win for ORNL ... Attractive Materials Process ... Glassy Steel
- Awards: And the Winners Are ...
Vol. 28, No. 4, ( 1995)
Materials Research Heats Up- The Beauty in Technology Transfer
- Nickel Aluminides: Breaking into the Marketplace
- Seeing and Catching Atoms: ORNL's Atom Probe Field Ion Microscope
- ORNL's Gelcasting: Molding the Future of Ceramic Forming?
- Electron Holography: A New Probe of Material Structure
- Materials under Stress: for Helping Industry
- ORNL and Submarines: Measuring the Sound of Silence
- Earth Sciences and ORNL: A Long Partnership
- Hot Water, Hot Rocks, Hot Science
- Awards and Appointments
- User Facilities: Metrology Research and Development Laboratories
- R&D Updates: Five R&D 100 awards for ORNL; "greening" of Mt. St. Helens; food dyes and breast cancer risk
- Technical Highlights
- Educational Activities
- Technology Transfer
Vol. 28, No. 2, ( 1995)
Energy and Global Climate Change- Energy and Global Climate Change: Why ORNL?
- Predicting Climate Change
- Biomass Fuels, Energy, Carbon, and Global Climate Change
- Global Change Research Highlights
- Managing Global Change Information
- Promoting International Deployment of Greenhouse Gas Technologies
- Electric Utilities and Energy Efficiency
- Power to the People: Integrated Resource Planning in Developing Countries
- The Transportation Revolution: On Track to a Better Future
- Saving Energy in Buildings and Appliances
- Fridge of the Future: ORNL's Refrigeration R&D
- New Gas-Fired Heat Pump Technologies Help Chill Greenhouse Effect
- Awards and Appointments
- Educational Activites
- Technical Highlights
- R&D Updates
- Technology Transfer
Vol. 28, No. 1, ( 1995)
Hi-Tech Mapping- The Oak Ridge Solution to Manufacturing Problems
- Risky Business: Assessing Cleanup Plans for Waste Sites
- Ecological Risks of Environmental Restoration
- Oak Ridge Reservation: Nationally Valuable Natural Resource
- ORNL and the Geographic Information Systems Revolution
- Tributes to Cliff Shull and Alvin Weinberg
- Awards and Appointments
- Technical Highlights
- R&D Updates
- Technology Transfer
Vol. 26, No. 3, ( 1993)
Hydropower's ImpactsVol. 26, No. 2, ( 1993)
Imaging Surfaces- Reinventing Ceramic Production
- ORNL's Magic Bullets: On Target for Health
- Tumor-Fighting Genes and Chemical Health Risks
- Strategies for Radwaste Management
- Awards and Appointments
- Take a Number: On letting computers make decisions
- User Facilities: Building Envelope Research Center
- Educational Activities: "Adventures in Supercomputing" for students; educational networks
- R&D Updates
- Technical Highlights
- Technology Transfer
Vol. 26, No. 1, ( 1993)
High-Temperature Ceramics- Scurfy Mice: A Model for Autoimmune Disease
- The Fate of Nutrients in Streams
- New Uses for ORNL's Ultrasensitive Mass Spectrometer
- Regulation of Carcinogens: The Problem and a Solution
- Intelligent Robots! Do We Need Them and Can They Be Built?
- Awards and Appointments
- Pick a Number: Modeling subsurface processes
- User Facilities: 100,000 hours of Oak Ridge Electron Linear Accelerator operation
- Educational Activities: ORNL researchers meet youngsters at the Environmental Fair
- R&D Updates
- Technical Highlights
- Technology Transfer
Vol. 18, No. 4, ( 1985)
- Parallel Computing at ORNL. Computer scientists are learning how to use new parallel processing machines to meet ORNL's research needs. New parallel algorithms for solving large systems of equations have been developed at ORNL.
- Protecting Human Health: The Chemical Challenge. Scientists at ORNL have developed several methods of detecting human responses to hazardous energy-related chemicals. They are using interferon as a bioeffects marker and are developing the "fluoroimmunosensor," which detects minute amounts of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons in body fluids and tissues.
- The Technology Transfer Fund: A Status Report on the ORNL Projects. ORNL, DOE, and the Office of Technology Applications of Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc., have committed funds to stimulate innovation and bring ORNL technologies to the stage where their commercial potential can be judged. The status of five technology-transfer projects is described.
- Pion Emission from Low-Energy Nuclear Reactions. A theorist said it couldn't be done, but nuclear physicists at ORNL's Holifield Heavy Ion Research Facility accelerator have detected the emission of pions, short-lived particles that serve as the "glue" in the nucleus, from low-energy nuclear reactions. Current theory is being revised to explain how pions can be produced at unexpectedly low energies.
- Managing Hazardous Waste: ORNL Examines the Options. ORNL is playing an important role in managing the nation's defense-chemical wastes and in devising better ways of dealing with its own hazardous materials.
- Books. Chancing It: Why We Take Risks is reviewed by W. S. Lyon.
- Take a Number
- Technical Capsules. Device to measure metal deformation wins IR 100 award; technology transfer and cell freezing.
- Lab Anecdote. The story of the radiation-danger symbol.
- News Notes. ORNL Director Herman Postma talks to President Reagan; Radio Frequency Test Facility completed; Associate Director Fred Mynatt testifies on advanced reactors for space; fusion magnet facility begins 6-coil tests; Athens power-distribution experiment under way; Life Sciences Complex plans told; Cummins Engine licensing breaks new ground.
- Awards and Appointments