ORNL is proud of its role in fostering the next generation of scientists and engineers. We bring in talented young researchers, team them with accomplished scientists and engineers, and put them to work at the lab’s one-of-a-kind facilities.
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ORNL is proud of its role in fostering the next generation of scientists and engineers. We bring in talented young researchers, team them with accomplished scientists and engineers, and put them to work at the lab’s one-of-a-kind facilities.
For some researchers, cracking the big questions can be like mining for a lone diamond under tons of solid rock.
ORNL researchers have been assisting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital with imaging data analysis for the past eight years.
If you have ever heard a bagpipe band perform the tune “Amazing Grace,” you can’t help but be inspired.
ORNL’s climate and energy scientists have developed a new method to pinpoint which electrical service areas will be most vulnerable as populations grow and temperatures rise.
The summertime temperatures in the North Slope and Seward Peninsula of Alaska rarely reach higher than 50 degrees F and the perpetually dark winters fall below minus 20 F.
Two ORNL institutes, the Climate Change Science Institute (CCSI) and the Urban Dynamics Institute (UDI), have joined forces to address one of the most pressing problems facing mid-size cities today: how best to allocate scarce resources to deal with cli
ORNL mathematician Clayton Webster picked up an Early Career Research Program award from DOE’s Office of Science this year. His job is to find the important information in mountains of data.
ORNL early-career award-winner Travis Humble promotes quantum computing at the lab.