Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




World's first hard X-ray free-electron laser is on course to completion

TheAllINeed.com
(NC&T/ANL) LCLS will be the world's first X-ray free electron laser to produce hard X-rays when it becomes operational at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in 2009. It will be the first X-ray laser to combine the brilliance of laser sources with the penetrating power and atomic sensitivity of X-rays. Argonne is a partner laboratory on the project and is responsible for the 130-meter undulator system, including magnets, support structures, beam diagnostics, controls and vacuum systems.

Undulators are the heart of the LCLS free electron laser, providing a precise magnetic field through which an electron beam will travel. The undulators' magnetic fields force the electrons to oscillate back and forth and produce large amounts of X-rays. These X-rays interact back on the electrons and force them to bunch at X-ray wavelengths. When this occurs, the electrons emit their light coherently, causing a large gain in radiation power that raises the X-rays' intensity.

"Argonne was tapped to participate in this project due to the expertise demonstrated with the Advanced Photon Source undulator systems," said J. Murray Gibson, associate laboratory director of Argonne's Scientific User Facilities. "An X-ray laser such as LCLS will open up new scientific frontiers and represents an immense technical achievement for the United States. We could not have done this without the partnership of national laboratories, universities and industry."

"The last of the 40 LCLS undulators was assembled and accepted by Argonne late last month, on time and within budget, from Hi-Tech Manufacturing in Illinois and Metalex Manufacturing in Ohio," said Argonne LCLS Project Director Geoff Pile. "The LCLS project remains on course for completion in March 2009."

"This is the first time such ultra-precise undulators were mass-produced in America by non-specialized small businesses," said Emil Trakhtenberg, Argonne senior mechanical engineer at APS.

The diagram illustrates the path of electrons through the Linac Coherent Light Source and the resulting X-ray beams. The linac accelerates a linear beam of electrons that pass through undulators, which force the electrons to oscillate back and forth. (Photo: LCLS)
Each undulator comprises a precision-tuned array of ultra-strong neodymium-iron-boron permanent magnets and vanadium permendur magnetic poles. The magnets and poles are mounted in aluminum structures bolted into a 3.4-meter-long titanium strongback. The strongback secures the magnet and pole assemblies, counteracts the very high magnetic forces between the upper and lower magnetic arrays, and is critical in determining the thermal and mechanical stability of the undulator. Precision and stability requirements for the LCLS devices far exceed those for existing undulators at the Advanced Photon Source and other light-source facilities.

The pulses of X-ray laser light from LCLS, a fourth-generation light-source, will be shorter and a billion times brighter than can be produced by any other X-ray source available now or in the near future.

"These advanced characteristics will aid scientists in discovering and probing new states of matter, understanding and following chemical reactions and biological processes in real time, imaging chemical and structural properties of materials on the nanoscale, and many new and exciting discoveries we cannot even imagine today," said Marion White, senior physicist at APS. "The LCLS will enable revolutionary new science."

The LCLS project is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and is being constructed by a partnership of three national laboratories: SLAC, Argonne and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
Stable quantum computing
On-chip optics
Triple-scoop baryon
Electron on video
Ultra-cold gas
Black holes
Giant magnetocaloric materials
Building nanodevices
Free-electron laser
New form of matter
Mother-of-pearl:
Sand wave behaviour
New electron wave
Killer electrons in space
A wave is a wave
Odd behavior in superconductors
Ultra-sharp glimpse of electrons
Opposites interfere
Quantum super computers
Magnet to tune magnet
Quotes
Have you seen a tall, lanky dufus with a bird face and hair like the bride of Frankenstein?-Elaine, describing Kramer

Having major planets disappear is always a bad sign.- Jim Blinn

Great minds have purposes, others have wishes.- Washington Irving

Great spirits often meet violent opposition with mediocre minds - Albert Einstein


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Food prices remain high despite higher output
The latest Food Outlook indicates that the food import bill of the Low Income Food Deficit Countries (LIFDCs) is expected to reach US$169 billion in 2008, 40 percent more than in 2007.
What's your favorite school subject?
Math
Science
History
English
Arts
Other
 
Things to ponder
What do sheep count when they can't get to sleep?

Did you know...
The word yo-yo originated in the Philippines and means "come back."

Quote of the day
I think the world is run by 'C' students.
Al McGuire

Featured article
How to take pictures in the dark
Have you ever taken a picture of a cherished moment only later to discover it did not develop well because of the lighting? This will never happen again.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur