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Joe Tuccillo, a human geography research scientist, leads the UrbanPop project that uses census data to create synthetic populations. Using a Python software suite called Likeness on ORNL’s high-performance computers, Tuccillo’s team generates a population with individual ‘agents’ designed to represent people that interact with other agents, facilities and services in a simulated neighborhood.
![Group of over 20 participants, both girls and boys, line up in a group with four rows of 13 in the quad - outside area of ORNL.](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-07/Picture3%20group.jpg?h=d8f5c338&itok=lcL85iSg)
ORNL hosted the Mid-South Regional Chapter of the American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, or ASPRS. Participants spanning government, academia and industry engaged in talks, poster sessions, events and workshops to further scientific discovery in a field devoted to using pictures to understand changes to the earth’s inhabitants and landscape.
![This photo is of three men sitting around a laptop computer that happens to be working on cybersecurity testing equipment.](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-07/Picture11.jpg?h=cc1017b3&itok=hCUDThD9)
A newly established internship between ORNL and Maryville College is bringing cybersecurity careers to a local liberal arts college. The internship was established by a Maryville College alumni who recently joined ORNL.
![Man in blue suit and blue and white button down with brown air and brown facial hair smiles for a photo with a green and teal background. Plus a quote](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-07/Picture7.png?h=f23f0227&itok=QhphdCXk)
As a data scientist, Daniel Adams uses storytelling to parse through a large amount of information to determine which elements are most important, paring down the data to result in the most efficient and accurate data set possible.
![Digital image of molecules would look like. There are 10 clusters of these shapes in grey, red and blue with a teal blue background](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-07/Picture6.jpg?h=7e1075cf&itok=YSLnbbso)
Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists have developed a method leveraging artificial intelligence to accelerate the identification of environmentally friendly solvents for industrial carbon capture, biomass processing, rechargeable batteries and other applications.
![Redish orange sample of material, round in size and small (taking up only a quarter of the image). There is a dark grey floor and blue light background](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-06/Picture1.jpg?h=a367a0f1&itok=atewqjdE)
Despite strong regulations and robust international safeguards, authorities routinely interdict nuclear materials outside of regulatory control. Researchers at ORNL are exploring a new method that would give authorities the ability to analyze intercepted nuclear material and determine where it originated.
![Colorful circles with symbols of Vc, Vh and Vt inside. Blue, Orange and Pink](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-06/OLCF_SavageNeutrinos_2024.jpg?h=ae114f5c&itok=2f-mXg6g)
Researchers used quantum simulations to obtain new insights into the nature of neutrinos — the mysterious subatomic particles that abound throughout the universe — and their role in the deaths of massive stars.
Close on the heels of its fourth summer school, the Quantum Science Center, or QSC, hosted its second in-person all-hands meeting in early May. More than 150 scientists, engineers and support staff traveled from 17 institutions to review the QSC’s progress, examine existing priorities and brainstorm new short- and long-term research endeavors.
![Three team members looking at plants stand in front of a mountain scene, two are in orange safety vests.](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-06/IMG_6533.jpg?h=71976bb4&itok=27R2TL42)
When Oak Ridge National Laboratory's science mission takes staff off-campus, the lab’s safety principles follow. That’s true even in the high mountain passes of Washington and Oregon, where ORNL scientists are tracking a tree species — and where wildfires have become more frequent and widespread.
![Students gather at a poster session](/sites/default/files/styles/list_page_thumbnail/public/2024-06/MA8A0496.jpg?h=1116cd87&itok=rcuPZKIU)
Purdue University hosted more than 100 attendees at the fourth annual Quantum Science Center summer school. Students and early-career members of the QSC —headquartered at ORNL — participated in lectures, hands-on workshops, poster sessions and panel discussions alongside colleagues from other DOE National Quantum Information Science Research Centers.