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Early career scientists got intensive, hands-on training using supercomputers at the coveted Argonne Training Program on Extreme-Scale Computing.
A new process combining infrared light and machine learning shows potential to break barriers in disease detection.
The quantum electrodynamic cascades can lead to supernovas & fast radio bursts that equal in milliseconds the energy the sun puts out in three days.
Los Alamos & Oak Ridge scientists lead a DOE supercomputing effort to model the interactions affecting climate change in Arctic coastal regions.
Scientists have found lasofoxifene may be a safer and more effective treatment for breast cancer than the current gold standard.
As rising sea levels threaten coastal areas, scientists are using an emerging nuclear dating technique to track the ins and outs of water flow.
The goal of the funding program is to harness cutting-edge research tools for new scientific discoveries fundamental to clean energy solutions.
Based on the latest data, NOvA did not observe a significant asymmetry in the rates of electron neutrino and electron antineutrino appearance.
“Science in Time of COVID” is a contest to educate, inspire, and entertain audiences about the extraordinary science, innovation, and people at DOE.
Students Will Perform Research at National Laboratories