About this Event
The COVID19 pandemic has aggravated supply chain uncertainty, hardened national borders and hampered the movement of people and goods across the world, while a global trade diversification megatrend continues to accelerate.
What will this mean for the supply chains that Australian businesses rely on to grow and prosper?
And what does the future hold for Australia-Taiwan trade?
Please join us for a discussion about the outlook, opportunities, and enduring lessons beyond the global pandemic in this special webinar with business and trade leaders at the forefront of the Australia-Taiwan economic relationship.
AGENDA
[13:00 - 13:05] Welcome and opening remarks - Mr John Toigo, Chair of Australia-Taiwan Business Council (ATBC)
Righting a wrong, nuclear physicists improve precision of neutrino studies phys.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from phys.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
DOE/Oak Ridge National Laboratory
At the University of Notre Dame, part of the Oak Ridge Deuterated Spectroscopic Array measured a reaction that causes noise in some neutrino detectors. (Credit: Michael Febbraro/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy)
Led by the Department of Energy s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a new study clears up a discrepancy regarding the biggest contributor of unwanted background signals in specialized detectors of neutrinos. Better characterization of background could improve current and future experiments to detect real signals from these weakly interacting, electrically neutral subatomic particles and understand their role in the universe. We ve identified a reaction with significant discrepancies between our new measurement and the historical data, said ORNL s Michael Febbraro, lead author of a study published in