Argonne and Pacific Northwest national laboratories are applying a suite of machine-learning techniques to better understand why water behaves so much differently than other liquids.
Argonne is using artificial intelligence to identify particles traversing 10-story tall particle detector at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva Switzerland.
Deep learning has enabled state-of-the-art results in high-energy neutrino physics. This application achieves 5x better background particle rejection compared to classical techniques.
At the Advanced Photon Source, scientists developed an artificial intelligence approach that replaces human intuition in identifying spurious data in X-ray diffraction patterns.