Argonne National Laboratory is tackling the world’s most challenging problems faster than ever before by using robotics, artificial intelligence and machine learning to automate science.
Cutting-edge ultrafast imaging by several methods revealed ultrafast mechanical motion tied to a change in magnetic state in a layered material. This magnetic effect could have applications in nanodevices requiring ultra-precise and fast motion control.
An Argonne team is working on digital twin software that will help the thousands of users of Department of Energy facilities employ their time there wisely.
It’s summer blockbuster season. Before you buy tickets for the next comic book movie, be sure to binge all of the ways that Argonne celebrated quantum science with the spring release of Marvel’s Antman and the Wasp: Quantumania.
In the most powerful X-ray facilities in the world, scientists can analyze samples so small they contain only 10,000 atoms. Smaller sizes have proved exceedingly difficult to achieve, but a multi-institutional team has scaled down to a single atom.
Electrochemistry is a hot field. Argonne is elevating its role in the University of Illinois Chicago’s Next Generation Electrochemistry workshop, which attracts the next generation of scientists to study the quickly expanding field.