PPPL Scientists Deliver New High-Resolution Diagnostic to National Laser Facility
Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) have built and delivered a high-resolution X-ray spectrometer for the largest and most powerful laser facility in the world.
Read more about PPPL Scientists Deliver New High-Resolution Diagnostic to National Laser FacilityDesigning New Metal Alloys Using Engineered Nanostructures
Stony Brook University assistant professor Jason Trelewicz brings his research to design and stabilize nanostructures in metals to Brookhaven Lab's Center for Functional Nanomaterials.
Read more about Designing New Metal Alloys Using Engineered NanostructuresArcticShark Flies its First Instruments
On September 21 and 22, from an airstrip at the Eastern Oregon Regional Airport, the ArcticShark flew its first instruments, hefting aloft on its 22-foot wings a modest payload of 18 pounds. Still, it was a landmark moment, a proof-of-concept, for the ARM Climate Research Facility’s latest and biggest unmanned aerial system (UAS).
Read more about ArcticShark Flies its First InstrumentsArgonne to Install Comanche System to Explore ARM Technology for HPC
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory is collaborating with Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) to provide system software expertise and a development ecosystem for a future high-performance computing (HPC) system based on 64-bit ARM processors.
Read more about Argonne to Install Comanche System to Explore ARM Technology for HPCDetailed View of Immune Proteins Could Lead to New Pathogen-Defense Strategies
A new study, led by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and at UC Berkeley, has resolved the structure of a ring of proteins used by the immune system to summon support when under attack, providing new insight into potential strategies for protection from pathogens.
Read more about Detailed View of Immune Proteins Could Lead to New Pathogen-Defense StrategiesUnlocking the Secrets of Ebola
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and their colleagues at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, the University of Tokyo and the University of Sierra Leone have identified a set of biomarkers that indicate which patients infected with the Ebola virus are most at risk of dying from the disease.
Read more about Unlocking the Secrets of EbolaDetailed View of Immune Proteins Could Lead to New Pathogen-Defense Strategies
Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and at UC Berkeley have resolved the structure of a ring of proteins used by the immune system to summon support when under attack, providing new insight into potential strategies for protection from pathogens.
Read more about Detailed View of Immune Proteins Could Lead to New Pathogen-Defense StrategiesScientists Make First Observations of How a Meteor-Like Shock Turns Silica Into Glass
Studies at the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory have made the first real-time observations of how silica – an abundant material in the Earth’s crust – easily transforms into a dense glass when hit with a massive shock wave like one generated from a meteor impact.
Read more about Scientists Make First Observations of How a Meteor-Like Shock Turns Silica Into GlassCyanobacterial Studies Examine Cellular Structure During Nitrogen Starvation
Collaborators from Washington University in St. Louis and the US Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) are conducting a series of experiments to study the behavior of phycobilisomes—large antenna protein complexes in cyanobacteria cells—using the Bio-SANS instrument, beamline CG‑3, at the lab’s High Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR).
Read more about Cyanobacterial Studies Examine Cellular Structure During Nitrogen StarvationTo Find New Biofuel Enzymes, It Can Take a Microbial Village
A new study led by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), based at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), demonstrates the importance of microbial communities as a source of stable enzymes that could be used to convert plants to biofuels.
Read more about To Find New Biofuel Enzymes, It Can Take a Microbial VillageBrookhaven Lab Partners with Seven U.S. Department of Energy Labs to Support and Enhance Medical Data Analysis for U.S. Veterans
As a partner with seven other U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) national laboratories in the VA-DOE Big Data Science Initiative, Brookhaven National Laboratory will work with the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to transform the practice of medicine and improve the lives and well-being of our nation’s veterans and the public.
Read more about Brookhaven Lab Partners with Seven U.S. Department of Energy Labs to Support and Enhance Medical Data Analysis for U.S. VeteransNeutrons Probe Oxygen-Generating Enzyme for a Greener Approach to Clean Water
An international team of researchers led by Christian Obinger from the University of Vienna used neutron analysis at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, x-ray crystallography and other techniques to shed light on a unique enzyme that could provide an eco-friendly treatment for chlorite-contaminated water supplies and improve water quality worldwide.
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