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Dazzling
new light source opens at Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory
“The
light shines brilliantly these days at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation
Laboratory (SSRL). The start up of SSRL’s new synchrotron light facility,
SPEAR3, guarantees a world-class program in x-ray science for years to
come,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham. “This is the first
time the Department of Energy and the National Institutes of Health have
joined in funding an accelerator research
facility. I expect this to be a long and productive collaboration whose
impact will be truly far-reaching, generating new knowledge and benefits
to humanity.”
Some
2,000 scientists from around the country will use SPEAR3’s extremely
bright x-ray light each year to illuminate the long-kept secrets of
materials, chemical and biological matter.
SPEAR3, was formally opened at a dedication ceremony at the Stanford
Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) on January 29. SPEAR3
incorporates the latest technology—much of it pioneered at SSRL and
SLAC—to make it competitive with the best synchrotron sources in the
world.
Synchrotron light has revolutionized our view into the sub-microscopic
world and has contributed to major innovations in fields including
solid-state physics, materials science, environmental sciences, structural
biology and chemistry. Synchrotron light is created when electrons
traveling the speed of light take a curved path around a storage
ring—emitting electromagnetic light in x-ray through infrared
wavelengths. The resulting light beam has characteristics that make it
ideal for revealing the intricate architecture and utility of many kinds
of matter.
"This facility will be crucial to advancing the field of structural
biology, which is growing in importance to the NIH mission, by enabling
cutting-edge targeted drug design projects and major efforts such as the
Protein Structure Initiative and the Structural Biology arm of the NIH
Roadmap," said Dr. Elias Zerhouni, Director of the National Institutes of
Health. "From its very genesis as a joint project between NIH and DOE,
this new facility exemplifies the collaborative nature of science and the
productive cross-fertilization between biological and physical
disciplines."
“SPEAR3’s brilliant x-ray beams provide the ability to study smaller
objects at higher resolution,” said SSRL physicist John Arthur. “In many
cases the greater brightness at SPEAR3 will also enable researchers to
take their data faster, do more difficult experiments, and use smaller
samples of material.”
Thirty
years ago, SSRL was among the first laboratories in the world to use
synchrotron produced x-rays for studying matter at atomic and molecular
scales, and the first to offer beam time to a broad user community of
scientists from academic, industry and government labs (based on
peer-reviewed proposals). The original SPEAR ring, built for particle
physics programs at SLAC, yielded two Nobel prizes as well as fertile
ground for innovating synchrotron techniques and making important
discoveries. SPEAR3 is a complete rebuild and upgrade of the SPEAR2
ring.
The new ring has the capacity to
easily add 8 to 10 more beam lines with associated experimental stations.
A $14.2 million gift from the Gordon
and Betty Moore Foundation to the California Institute of Technology was
announced on January 28, which will allow scientists at Caltech and
Stanford University to collaborate on the building of a designated beam
line at SPEAR3 for structural molecular biology research. The exceptional
quality and brightness of SPEAR3’s x-ray light is perfectly suited to
studying complicated biological systems.
The
first electron beams circulated in the new SPEAR3 ring in mid-December
2003 and the first experiments are scheduled to begin in March.
“SPEAR3
is a remarkable resource that will enable state-of-the-art science in
numerous fields,” said SSRL Director and Stanford Professor Keith
Hodgson. “The $58
million project was
completed on time and on budget. I thank
the people whose extraordinary teamwork made the project successful. In a
remarkable accomplishment, the old accelerator was dismantled, a new
tunnel floor poured, SPEAR3 installed and commissioned, and users back
online—all within a mere 11 months.” |