R&D 100 Press Releases

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Press releases

After seeing the references on a couple of the articles, I got curious about tracking the source tree for the press releases. I wanted to see which sources were quoted most often, where the deepest branching was, etc. This is the result of that curiosity. The most referenced source is PR Newswire. (I suspect PR Newswire's source was EurekAlert, however, since that's where the DOE Office of Science's main newsfeed resides, and they copied the exact same title EurekAlert used.) The deepest nesting is currently MarketWatch and MSNBC.


  • 2007.08.07 Argonne wins three R&D 100 awards (This was linked on the Argonne Homepage for a while.)
    ARGONNE, Ill. (Aug. 7, 2007) – Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory devised three of the world's top 100 scientific and technological innovations during 2006, as judged by R&D magazine.
    “Once again, DOE's labs are at the cutting edge of innovation with new technology developments to enhance America's economic and national security,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Samuel Bodman. “My heartiest congratulations to the DOE researchers and scientists that have won R&D Magazine's prestigious awards this year.”
    Argonne Director Bob Rosner also offered his congratulations to the winning scientists. “These awards are a fitting tribute to scientific work of the highest rank, and a testament to the quality of research that happens every day at Argonne,” he said.
  • Same press release on:
    • azom.com (They focus on our project in the title: Passive Millimeter-Wave Spectrometer Amongst Award R&D Award Winners for Argonne National Lab) [1]
    • EurekAlert! (Argonne wins three R&D 100 awards for innovative technologies. Note that the DOE's Office of Science uses EurekAlert! for their official newsfeed.)
      • A number of blogs and newswires link to the EurekAlert! article. [2]
      • The Alchemist Newsletter 2007.08.15 R&D hits at Argonne (Source: EurekAlert) (Google cache version) (This one focuses on our project.)
      • FirstScience (Source: EurekAlert!)
    • NewsWise ([...] for innovative technologies. Source: Argonne National Laboratory.)
    • physorg.com (Access Grid, New Spectrometer, High-Resolution Mammography System Win R&D 100 awards. Source: Argonne National Laboratory)
    • PR Newswire ([...] for innovative technologies. Source: Argonne National Laboratory.)
    • WebWire (Source: Argonne National Laboratory)

  • MedicExchangeUSA mentions that Argonne got 3 awards but focuses on the mammography award.

  • 2007.08.17 Iran Daily New Gas Detection Mechanism Developed (PDF) (Source: Mehr News Agency) A small blurb mentioning the invention, focusing on Sasan
    TEHRAN, Aug. 17--An Iranian researcher with the US Energy Department has invented a new gas detection mechanism using millimeter-wave spectroscopy.
    Sasan Bakhtiari has devised a gas detector which can identify chemical agents from long distances, Mehr News Agency reported.


  • 2007.08.27 Argonne News Argonne wins three R&D 100 awards (The bi-weekly Argonne newspaper) The only place I've seen it in hard-copy so far. This one has a picture of the Access Grid project.

  • Argonne Today (The daily Argonne employee e-mail.)

  • 2007.08.31 New instrument covertly detects signals from illicit chemicals (Featured article on the Argonne front page for the first weeks of September. It's a little spooky / thrilling to see a recording of my voice linked on Argonne's main page.)
    A new award-winning invention covertly detects chemical plumes at great distances and may help thwart future chemical or nuclear-based terrorist attacks. Other potential uses include detecting environmental pollution and determining tissue damage in burn victims without physical contact. More...

  • A previous appearance of my name in Argonne News for the patent application for this project.
  • Not specifically related to this project, but I just found out that a previous article about our lab was slashdotted. I think this comment is slightly funny for my own reasons -- of course, he misses the Greek name at the beginning of the sentence. :) (I didn't realize my color version of the Chernobyl data was used in that article... You learn something new every day.)