Researchers are using synchrotron techniques to investigate the origins of the ochres used in Aboriginal Australian artefacts – potentially revealing new information on ochre exchange routes and Aboriginal Australian cultural relationships across Australia.

Spintronics is an emerging field of nanoscale electronics that could lead to smaller, more versatile and more robust electronic devices for a market worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

AS users have chalked up a previously impossible measurement, investigating how proteins behave in solutions as dilute as 2 micrograms per millilitre.

New research showing how some drugs cause side-effects by activating the immune system to attack the body’s own tissues will lead to new drugs designed to avoid these side-effects.

In mid-June 2012, the Australian Synchrotron achieved a record 99.76 percent for ‘beam availability’, a measure that compares the hours of synchrotron light we delivered to the hours of synchrotron light we allocated for experiments.

As a result of being recommended by AS staff, Australian company Tomco Technologies has sold two RF amplifiers to Japan.

All visitors to the Australian Synchrotron should first report to the new reception area in the National Centre for Synchrotron Science, which is to your right as you enter the site.

Beamtime submissions for round 2012/3 (September-December 2012) closed on 6 June 2012.

Prospective synchrotron and neutron users are invited to attend a one-day conference at the Australian Synchrotron on 9 July 2012.

Wireless tracking for synchrotron samples
Turning carbon dioxide into fuel a step closer
Research infrastructure at risk
A thrip back in time

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