Filter News
Area of Research
- Advanced Manufacturing (2)
- Biology and Environment (14)
- Clean Energy (13)
- Fusion and Fission (7)
- Fusion Energy (7)
- Isotope Development and Production (1)
- Isotopes (4)
- Materials (6)
- Materials for Computing (1)
- National Security (2)
- Neutron Science (5)
- Nuclear Science and Technology (16)
- Nuclear Systems Modeling, Simulation and Validation (1)
- Supercomputing (6)
News Topics
- (-) Advanced Reactors (34)
- (-) Biotechnology (23)
- (-) Space Exploration (25)
- 3-D Printing/Advanced Manufacturing (125)
- Artificial Intelligence (95)
- Big Data (58)
- Bioenergy (92)
- Biology (100)
- Biomedical (59)
- Buildings (59)
- Chemical Sciences (69)
- Clean Water (30)
- Climate Change (103)
- Composites (29)
- Computer Science (194)
- Coronavirus (46)
- Critical Materials (29)
- Cybersecurity (35)
- Decarbonization (81)
- Education (4)
- Element Discovery (1)
- Emergency (2)
- Energy Storage (111)
- Environment (198)
- Exascale Computing (39)
- Fossil Energy (6)
- Frontier (44)
- Fusion (55)
- Grid (65)
- High-Performance Computing (88)
- Hydropower (11)
- Irradiation (3)
- Isotopes (54)
- ITER (7)
- Machine Learning (48)
- Materials (145)
- Materials Science (144)
- Mathematics (9)
- Mercury (12)
- Microelectronics (4)
- Microscopy (51)
- Molten Salt (8)
- Nanotechnology (60)
- National Security (68)
- Net Zero (14)
- Neutron Science (133)
- Nuclear Energy (110)
- Partnerships (49)
- Physics (63)
- Polymers (33)
- Quantum Computing (35)
- Quantum Science (70)
- Renewable Energy (2)
- Security (24)
- Simulation (49)
- Software (1)
- Statistics (3)
- Summit (59)
- Sustainable Energy (129)
- Transformational Challenge Reactor (7)
- Transportation (97)
Media Contacts
Since 2019, a team of NASA scientists and their partners have been using NASA’s FUN3D software on supercomputers located at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility to conduct computational fluid dynamics simulations of a human-scale Mars lander. The team’s ongoing research project is a first step in determining how to safely land a vehicle with humans onboard onto the surface of Mars.
Ilenne Del Valle is merging her expertise in synthetic biology and environmental science to develop new technologies to help scientists better understand and engineer ecosystems for climate resilience.
A team of computational scientists at ORNL has generated and released datasets of unprecedented scale that provide the ultraviolet visible spectral properties of over 10 million organic molecules.
Nuclear engineering students from the United States Military Academy and United States Naval Academy are working with researchers at ORNL to complete design concepts for a nuclear propulsion rocket to go to space in 2027 as part of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DRACO program.
Four scientists affiliated with ORNL were named Battelle Distinguished Inventors during the lab’s annual Innovation Awards on Dec. 1 in recognition of being granted 14 or more United States patents.
Anne Campbell, a researcher at ORNL, recently won the Young Leaders Professional Development Award from the Minerals, Metals & Materials Society, or TMS, and has been chosen as the first recipient of the Young Leaders International Scholar Program award from TMS and the Korean Institute of Metals and Materials, or KIM.
Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, in collaboration with NASA, are taking additive manufacturing to the final frontier by 3D printing the same kind of wheel as the design used by NASA for its robotic lunar rover, demonstrating the technology for specialized parts needed for space exploration.
In June, ORNL hit a milestone not seen in more than three decades: producing a production-quality amount of plutonium-238
Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists studied hot springs on different continents and found similarities in how some microbes adapted despite their geographic diversity.
In a discovery aimed at accelerating the development of process-advantaged crops for jet biofuels, scientists at ORNL developed a capability to insert multiple genes into plants in a single step.