Champions in Science Whose Stars are Still Rising: Profile of Jeff Zira
For the run-up to the 2016 National Science Bowl® Finals April 28th to May 2nd, this is part of a series on previous NSB competitors.
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Dual Collaborations Using EMSL and DOE JGI to Speed and Amplify Research Impact
An innovative program with EMSL and the Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, or DOE JGI, in California, gives scientists a chance to combine the expertise and capabilities from both user facilities.
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NSLS Re-Use & Recycling Effort Saves Funding and Gives New Life to Key Components
When the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory shut down permanently in 2014, hundreds of pieces of equipment remained in the building, much of it still scientifically useful and valuable. Since then, many of these items have been re-purposed at its successor, NSLS-II — a DOE Office of Science User Facility — and at other facilities across the Lab site, saving millions of dollars for DOE and the Lab.
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The 2016 National Science Bowl® Finals Have Begun
This weekend, 69 high school teams and 47 middle school teams will be competing in the Finals of the 2016 National Science Bowl®. Keep checking back for updates and results of your favorite teams.
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Seeing Atoms and Molecules in Action with an Electron ‘Eye’
Berkeley Lab's HiRES to provide new views of material changes, chemical reactions.
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Champions in Science Whose Stars are Still Rising: Profile of Kay Aull
For the run-up to the 2016 National Science Bowl® Finals April 28th to May 2nd, this is the third in a series on previous NSB competitors.
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ORNL Researchers Discover New State of Water Molecule
The discovery, made possible with experiments at ORNL’s Spallation Neutron Source and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the United Kingdom, demonstrates features of water under ultra confinement in rocks, soil and cell walls, which scientists predict will be of interest across many disciplines.
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Giving Back to National Science Bowl
In the 1990s, Dean Jens and Doug Fuller were high school students playing on teams from Ankeny High School that were competing to secure coveted spots in the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Science Bowl (NSB) ® competition. Today, they’re professionals, fathers, and devoted alumni whose annual volunteer commitment to the NSB allows them to give back to a competition that helped shape their lives.
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Cleaning Up Hybrid Battery Electrodes Improves Capacity and Lifespan
PNNL chemists discovered they could make superior hybrid battery materials with a technology — called ion soft-landing — that intricately controls the raw components with a membrane that separates the ions, setting down only the negative ions on the electrode surfaces.
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ANNIE Finds a Home at Fermilab
A little experiment with big ambitions just finished moving in this week after a year’s worth of planning and research. The Accelerator Neutrino-Neutron Interaction Experiment, called ANNIE, recently settled down and began taking phase one data on April 15.
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What Screens are Made of: New Twists (and Bends) in LCD Research
X-ray research at Berkeley Lab details exotic structure formed by liquid crystals.
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Chemistry Consortium Uses Titan to Understand Actinides
A multi-institution team has been using computing resources at DOE’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) to understand actinide chemistry at the molecular level in hopes of designing methods to clean up contamination and safely store spent nuclear fuel.
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