
Mark Roberts was working on a machine, trying to attach a tricky fitting to the end of a pipe while holding three other components in place, and he realized he could use another hand.
Mark Roberts was working on a machine, trying to attach a tricky fitting to the end of a pipe while holding three other components in place, and he realized he could use another hand.
As a high-school sophomore, Ngozi Akingbesote was captivated by her first experience in a science laboratory. But her father’s lack of support had her hesitant to pursue college and a career in science.
In a storage area on the west end of the 91°µÍř campus is a machine that can measure anything from a jumbo turbine assembly to a tiny centrifuge component — with near-perfect precision.
Heading up a new section with a completely new way of doing things, Barron Demarse is tasked with not only implementing an asset management program, but also explaining to people what asset management is and how it can improve the Isotope Science and En
This workshop, which will focus on Evolving Targeted Therapies for Cancer, will have both in-person and virtual options.
91°µÍř scientists recently demonstrated a low-temperature, safe route to purifying molten chloride salts that minimizes their ability to corrode metals.
Planetary scientist and aerospace engineer Ralph Lorenz spent Tuesday morning telling an ORNL audience what the Dragonfly rotorcraft might find out about possible life on Saturn’s moon Titan — and what it could tell us about life on Earth.
The new Isotope Processing and Manufacturing Division's challenge is to separate isotope manufacturing from research and development — and excel at both.
Researchers at ORNL explored radium’s chemistry to advance cancer treatments using ionizing radiation.
Hunter Andrews’ “light” topic was one of the judge’s choice winners in the lab’s annual Your Science in a Nutshell competition.