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"I chose a career in science because it gives new perspectives on how to think about the world."
"Many topics interest me, and collaborative research presents me opportunities to develop interdisciplinary solutions to global issues."
"I have always been amazed by the level of scientific progress and resources driven by ORNL."
"Growing up in China, I was passionate about how science and technology could revolutionize the world."
Studies on the structure of RNA were done at ORNL in the early 1950s by biologist Elliot “Ken” Volkin and biochemist Waldo Cohn. They used radioisotope and chromatography techniques that were originally developed for plutonium production at the laboratory’s Graphite Reactor during World War II.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory today is an open science laboratory that attracts thousands of scientists and engineers from around the globe each year. It began in the World War II Manhattan Project, which developed the first atomic bombs. In summer 1939, tensions were rising among European powers...
In the early 1970s, scientists at laboratories worldwide raced to unravel the mystery of how billions of miles of DNA are packaged inside the cells of the human body. ORNL’s Don and Ada Olins were the first to discover the critical structure—the nucleosome—that winds DNA around proteins like thre...