Our Mission

DOE’s Office of Science has a mission to deliver scientific discoveries and major scientific tools to transform our understanding of nature and advance the energy, economic, and national security of the United States. We are the nation’s largest federal sponsor of basic research in the physical sciences and are a major supporter of research in such key scientific fields as physics, materials science, computing, and chemistry. We are also the lead federal agency supporting fundamental scientific research related to energy.

To keep America in the forefront of discovery and innovation, we sponsor research at hundreds of universities, national laboratories, and other institutions across the country. We also build and maintain a vitally important array of large-scale scientific facilities at the DOE national laboratories, which are used by thousands of researchers every year.

About the Office of Science

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The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Office of Science is the nation’s largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences, the steward of 10 DOE national laboratories, and the lead federal agency supporting fundamental research for energy production and security. Our job is to keep America at the forefront of discovery. This video is an overview of the Office of Science’s mission, people, and resources.
Video courtesy of DOE's Office of Science

Science Headlines

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Modeling the Glaciation of Mixed-Phase Clouds in the Laboratory
Numerical models can be used to reproduce, interpret, and extend the mixed-phase cloud experiment in the cloud chamber.
Researchers Succeed in Taking 3D X-ray Images of a Skyrmion
Nanoscale spinning circles of magnetism may find broad application in microelectronic storage devices, quantum computing, and more.
Los Alamos Contributes to First Neutrino Detection at Short-Baseline Near Detector
The international collaboration at Fermilab detector seeks evidence for new physics.
Argonne’s Alexander Zholents Receives Robert R. Wilson Prize
The annual award is given by the American Physical Society to recognize outstanding achievement in the physics of particle accelerators.

University and Stakeholder News

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LSU Graduate Student will Perform Thesis Research in Nuclear Decay Spectroscopy at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
LSU physics PhD Candidate, David He, has been selected by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science for the Graduate Student Research award.
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Faculty Members Win DOE Early Career Program Awards
Two Carnegie Mellon faculty members, Carlee Joe-Wong and Thomas O’Connor, have received the Early Career Program Awards from the DOE.
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UW-Madison, Japan’s National Institute for Fusion Science Strengthen Research Partnership
The collaboration will focus on research related to stellarators, which are viewed as the main alternative to tokamaks for fusion energy systems.
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With DOE Early Career Award, Whitney Loo is Engineering the Heart of Next-Gen Batteries
Whitney Loo is a the Conway Assistant Professor in chemical and biological engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Recently Featured Articles

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Science Highlights

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Dept. of Energy Office of Science delivers scientific discoveries, tools for the nation via programs in Advanced Scientific Computing Research; Basic Energy Sciences; Biological & Environmental Research; Fusion Energy Sciences; High Energy Physics; Nuclear Physics. Also supports Accelerator Research; Isotope Research; Small Business Innovation Research and Technology Transfer; 5 national quantum centers; 2 energy innovation hubs. Stewards 10 DOE national labs. 100-plus Nobel Prizes, $8.1 billion budget.

The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.

Image courtesy of the Department of Energy Office of Science