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Freeze Frame: Scientists Capture Atomic-Scale Snapshots of Artificial Proteins

Rare Disease Q&A: What Rare Diseases Are and Why That Matters

A Matchmaker for Microbiomes

An illustration of a community of microbes

When Solids and Liquids Meet: In Nanoscale Detail

Illustration - Infrared light is focused onto the sharp metallic tip of an atomic force microscope, enabling the acquisition of vibrational spectra from a graphene-liquid interface. (Credit: Artem Baskin, Jonathon Larson/Berkeley Lab)

Underwater Telecom Cables Make Superb Seismic Network

Six Berkeley Lab Scientists Named AAAS Fellows

Collage of Berkeley Lab's 2019 AAAS Fellows

A Winning Pitch for 3D Radiation-Mapping Tech: Q&A With Berkeley Lab’s Erika Suzuki

Photo - Erika Suzuki pilots a drone equipped with a LAMP radiation detection and mapping system in a 2019 technology demonstration. (Courtesy of Erika Suzuki)

Berkeley Lab Names Robert Kostecki Director of the Energy Storage and Distributed Resources Division

photo of Robert Kostecki

The Beauty of Imperfections: Linking Atomic Defects to 2D Materials’ Electronic Properties

Yelick Recognized for Outstanding Leadership in HPC

Climate Change Expected to Shift Location of East Asian Monsoons

Ho Chi Minh City on a very rainy day.

Scientists Explore Egyptian Mummy Bones With X-Rays and Infrared Light to Gain New Insight on Ancient Life

Photo - Ahmed Elnewishy, an associate professor at Cairo University, holds a femur bone sample from mummified human remains that was studied at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source synchrotron. Elneshy and Cairo University postdoctoral researcher Mohamed Kasem studied dozens of ancient Egyptian bone samples and some soil samples during a two-month visit made possible by a grant-supported program called LAAAMP. (Credit: Marilyn Sargent/Berkeley Lab)