Filter News
Area of Research
News Topics
- (-) Climate Change (10)
- (-) Computer Science (6)
- (-) Hydropower (2)
- (-) Net Zero (2)
- (-) Security (2)
- 3-D Printing/Advanced Manufacturing (10)
- Big Data (3)
- Bioenergy (12)
- Biology (18)
- Biomedical (5)
- Biotechnology (2)
- Buildings (6)
- Chemical Sciences (3)
- Clean Water (5)
- Composites (1)
- Coronavirus (6)
- Critical Materials (1)
- Cybersecurity (2)
- Decarbonization (12)
- Energy Storage (12)
- Environment (31)
- Exascale Computing (2)
- Frontier (1)
- Grid (6)
- High-Performance Computing (8)
- Machine Learning (1)
- Materials (4)
- Materials Science (3)
- Mathematics (3)
- Mercury (4)
- Microscopy (5)
- National Security (1)
- Neutron Science (1)
- Physics (1)
- Polymers (1)
- Simulation (4)
- Summit (2)
- Sustainable Energy (12)
- Transportation (10)
Media Contacts
While completing his undergraduate studies in the Philippines, atmospheric chemist Christian Salvador caught a glimpse of the horizon. What he saw concerned him: a thin, black line hovering above the city.
Carl Dukes’ career as an adept communicator got off to a slow start: He was about 5 years old when he spoke for the first time. “I’ve been making up for lost time ever since,” joked Dukes, a technical professional at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Bob Bolton may have moved to a southerly latitude at ORNL, but he is still stewarding scientific exploration in the Arctic, along with a project that helps amplify the voices of Alaskans who reside in a landscape on the front lines of climate change.
Mirko Musa spent his childhood zigzagging his bike along the Po River. The Po, Italy’s longest river, cuts through a lush valley of grain and vegetable fields, which look like a green and gold ocean spreading out from the river’s banks.
Climate change often comes down to how it affects water, whether it’s for drinking, electricity generation, or how flooding affects people and infrastructure. To better understand these impacts, ORNL water resources engineer Sudershan Gangrade is integrating knowledge ranging from large-scale climate projections to local meteorology and hydrology and using high-performance computing to create a holistic view of the future.
Hydrologist Jesús “Chucho” Gomez-Velez is in the right place at the right time with the right tools and colleagues to explain how the smallest processes within river corridors can have a tremendous impact on large-scale ecosystems.
John “Jack” Cahill is out to illuminate previously unseen processes with new technology, advancing our understanding of how chemicals interact to influence complex systems whether it’s in the human body or in the world beneath our feet.
Matthew Craig grew up eagerly exploring the forest patches and knee-high waterfalls just beyond his backyard in central Illinois’ corn belt. Today, that natural curiosity and the expertise he’s cultivated in biogeochemistry and ecology are focused on how carbon cycles in and out of soils, a process that can have tremendous impact on the Earth’s climate.
Science has taken Melanie Mayes from Tennessee to the tropics, studying some of the most important ecosystems in the world.
What’s getting Jim Szybist fired up these days? It’s the opportunity to apply his years of alternative fuel combustion and thermodynamics research to the challenge of cleaning up the hard-to-decarbonize, heavy-duty mobility sector — from airplanes to locomotives to ships and massive farm combines.