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The Office of Science national scientific user facilities provide researchers with the most advanced tools of modern science, including accelerators, colliders, supercomputers, light sources and neutron sources, as well as facilities for studying the nano world, the environment, and the atmosphere.
To help researchers examine important cloud processes, a DOE user facility activity combines high-resolution simulations with real-world observations
Observation of impulsive stimulated X-ray Raman scattering with attosecond soft X-ray pulses.
Harnessing the intensity of a terahertz laser pulse brings the resolution of electron scattering closer to the scale of electron and proton motion.
Crystals grown from layers of atoms arrange themselves on semiconductor surfaces to add new capabilities.
Neutron and X-ray experiments illuminate the magnetic transitions in hexagonal iron sulfide that transform it from a conductor to an insulator.
Nuclear theorists explore the properties of dense neutron matter to get at the core of neutron stars.
New laser-driven experiments and numerical simulations reveal an electron acceleration mechanism relevant to young supernova shock waves.
Machine learning-based algorithm characterizes materials’ microstructure in 3D and real time.
X-ray scattering measures the positions of atoms as they vibrate in a two-dimensional cover sheet.