Feature Stories
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 3-May-2025 04:09 ET (3-May-2025 08:09 GMT/UTC)
A new era of research comes into focus
DOE/Argonne National LaboratoryA modular neutrino detector years in the making
DOE/SLAC National Accelerator LaboratoryNew upgrade will supercharge atomic vision of the world’s most powerful X-ray laser
DOE/SLAC National Accelerator LaboratoryThe Department of Energy (DOE) has given the green light for construction to begin on a high-energy upgrade that will further boost the performance of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), the world’s most powerful X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) at the DOE’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. When complete, the upgrade will allow scientists to explore atomic-scale processes with unprecedented precision and address fundamental questions in energy storage, catalysis, biology, materials science and quantum physics like never before.
- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy
Xiaoqian Chen earns DOE Early Career Award for quantum materials research
DOE/Brookhaven National LaboratoryAI-guided experiments speed scientific discovery
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory- Funder
- DOE/US Department of Energy
Old ways making way for new
DOE/Sandia National LaboratoriesALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — “They say water is life, and that couldn’t be truer,” said Anne Francis, who has spent her life on the Navajo Nation, watching how water sustains the land, the crops and the herds of cattle on her family ranch.
But life on the Navajo Nation is hard.
The vast landscape is dotted with old-fashioned windmills, and many places are untouched by modern conveniences like electricity. Without the right infrastructure, getting water where it needs to go has been a struggle for generations.
A new technology, developed in partnership with Sandia National Laboratories and New Mexico State University, is transforming that struggle into a sustainable solution.