Filter News
Area of Research
News Topics
- (-) Big Data (2)
- (-) Climate Change (1)
- (-) Cybersecurity (2)
- (-) Isotopes (3)
- (-) Microscopy (1)
- 3-D Printing/Advanced Manufacturing (5)
- Advanced Reactors (1)
- Artificial Intelligence (4)
- Bioenergy (5)
- Biology (1)
- Biomedical (3)
- Biotechnology (1)
- Clean Water (2)
- Composites (1)
- Computer Science (14)
- Energy Storage (4)
- Environment (8)
- Exascale Computing (1)
- Fusion (3)
- Grid (3)
- Machine Learning (1)
- Materials Science (4)
- Mercury (1)
- Molten Salt (1)
- Nanotechnology (2)
- Neutron Science (4)
- Nuclear Energy (10)
- Physics (2)
- Polymers (2)
- Quantum Science (2)
- Security (2)
- Space Exploration (3)
- Summit (4)
- Sustainable Energy (1)
- Transportation (6)
Media Contacts
For nearly three decades, scientists and engineers across the globe have worked on the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), a project focused on designing and building the world’s largest radio telescope. Although the SKA will collect enormous amounts of precise astronomical data in record time, scientific breakthroughs will only be possible with systems able to efficiently process that data.
More than 6,000 veterans died by suicide in 2016, and from 2005 to 2016, the rate of veteran suicides in the United States increased by more than 25 percent.
As technology continues to evolve, cybersecurity threats do as well. To better safeguard digital information, a team of researchers at the US Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) has developed Akatosh, a security analysis tool that works in conjunctio...
A new microscopy technique developed at the University of Illinois at Chicago allows researchers to visualize liquids at the nanoscale level — about 10 times more resolution than with traditional transmission electron microscopy — for the first time. By trapping minute amounts of...
As leader of the RF, Communications, and Cyber-Physical Security Group at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Kerekes heads an accelerated lab-directed research program to build virtual models of critical infrastructure systems like the power grid that can be used to develop ways to detect and repel cyber-intrusion and to make the network resilient when disruption occurs.
A tiny vial of gray powder produced at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory is the backbone of a new experiment to study the intense magnetic fields created in nuclear collisions.
“Made in the USA.” That can now be said of the radioactive isotope molybdenum-99 (Mo-99), last made in the United States in the late 1980s. Its short-lived decay product, technetium-99m (Tc-99m), is the most widely used radioisotope in medical diagnostic imaging. Tc-99m is best known ...
For the past six years, some 140 scientists from five institutions have traveled to the Arctic Circle and beyond to gather field data as part of the Department of Energy-sponsored NGEE Arctic project. This article gives insight into how scientists gather the measurements that inform t...