Feature Articles
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 17-May-2026 17:15 ET (17-May-2026 21:15 GMT/UTC)
8-Jun-2022
Build-a-satellite program could fast track national security space missions
DOE/Sandia National Laboratories
Valhalla, a Python-based performance modeling framework developed at Sandia National Laboratories, uses high-performance computing to build preliminary satellite designs based on mission requirements and then runs those designs through thousands of simulations. The results of the simulations feed into an interactive multidimensional video-like view of satellites executing their mission and hundreds of plots that show the user the relationship between each of the outputs and inputs at a glance. This data enables the user to quickly find the solution that best executes the mission.
7-Jun-2022
Mentoring the next generation of marine researchers
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Program pairs PNNL experts with aspiring UW undergraduates who learn through doing on laboratory projects.
7-Jun-2022
PNNL makes waves in new issue of Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
A new journal issue is dedicated to highlighting the Triton Initiative’s recent work advancing environmental monitoring of marine energy.
7-Jun-2022
International team visualizes properties of plant cell walls at nanoscale
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
To optimize biomaterials for reliable, cost-effective paper production, building construction, and biofuel development, researchers often study the structure of plant cells using techniques such as freezing plant samples or placing them in a vacuum. These methods provide valuable data but often cause permanent damage to the samples.
- Journal
- Communications Materials
- Funder
- National Centre for Scientific Research, Aix-Marseille University, BioEnergy Science Center
7-Jun-2022
ARM plans upgrades as it marks 30 years of collecting atmospheric data
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
As the Department of Energy’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement user facility marks 30 years of collecting continuous measurements of the Earth’s atmosphere this year, the ARM Data Center at Oak Ridge National Laboratory is shepherding changes to its operations to make the treasure trove of data more easily accessible and useful to scientists studying Earth’s climate around the world.
7-Jun-2022
Zhai awarded DOE Early Career funding for plant enzyme studies
DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory
Zhiyang Zhai, an associate biologist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory, is one of 83 scientists from across the nation selected to receive funding for research as part of the DOE Office of Science’s Early Career Research Program. Zhai will use the funding to explore the role of a key enzyme in regulating plants’ metabolic processes, including the synthesis and accumulation of oil, with the aim of getting plants to produce net-zero carbon fuels.
7-Jun-2022
Experts chip away at corrosion for the future of fusion
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Practical fusion energy is not just a dream at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Experts in fusion and material science are working together to develop solutions that will make a fusion pilot plant — and ultimately carbon-free, abundant fusion electricity — possible.
3-Jun-2022
ORNL, partners launch first experiments using new facility to make cosmic isotopes on Earth
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Two decades in the making, a new flagship facility for nuclear physics opened on May 2, and scientists from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have a hand in 10 of its first 34 experiments. ORNL researchers and their partners at other national laboratories and universities launched the first experiment on May 11. The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, or FRIB, a DOE Office of Science user facility at Michigan State University, will produce more than 1,000 new rare isotopes.
- Funder
- US Department of Energy Office of Science
3-Jun-2022
Pushing the boundaries of Moore’s law: How can extreme UV light produce tiny microchips?
DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Some analysts say that the end of Moore’s Law is near, but Patrick Naulleau, the director of Berkeley Lab’s Center for X-Ray Optics (CXRO), says that it could be decades before the modern chip runs out of room for improvement, thanks to advances in materials and instrumentation enabled by the CXRO.