News Archives

Neutrinos are the ghosts of the universe. They pass through all matter and travel at near the speed of light. And some begin with a star's violent death.
Third in a series of profiles on the recipients of DOE’s Office of Science early career awards: Alysia Marino, a University of Colorado scientist who is spending her career tracking down neutrinos and learning their secrets.
Seing Inside Nature's Toy Box: Artistic rendering of quarks and gluons being imaged using Ivan Vitev's new technology.
Second in a series of profiles on the recipients of DOE’s Office of Science early career awards: Ivan Vitev, a Los Alamos National Lab scientist who shows how the building blocks of matter are organized in Nature’s toy box.
A representation of multi-metal catalysts, which mimic photosynthetic reactions.
First in a series of profiles on the recipients of DOE’s Office of Science early career awards: Theodore Betley, a Harvard University scientist who is catalyzing transformations for chemicals and students.
The Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Light Source Facility at Dusk.
New advances, including light sources, allow for non-destructive techniques for examining old artifacts.
NREL researchers are experimenting with adding wind and photovoltaic solar energy systems at the Amundsen-Scott Research Station at the South Pole. The new station originally was supposed to include renewable energy systems, but contruction delays and other factors cut them from the project.
Researchers supported by the Office of Science are doing ‘cool’ new research this summer.