APS News Articles 2003

Is Graphite a Diamond’s Best Friend? New Information on Material Transformation (Nov. 18)
Diagram of a typical diamond anvil cell configurationScience has yet to achieve the alchemist’s dream of turning lead into gold. But a group of re-searchers using the GeoSoilEn-viroCARS (GSECARS) and High-Pressure Collaborative Access Team (HP-CAT) facilities at the Department of Energy’s Advanced Photon Source (APS) at Argonne National Laboratory, may have found a way to turn ordinary soft graphite (source of the “lead” found in pencils) into a new, super-hard material that “looks” just like diamond.
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IXS-CDT, APS Sign Memorandum of Understanding for Sector 30 (Oct. 27)
IXS Memorandum of UnderstandingWith strokes from four ceremonial pens, the Inelastic X-ray Scattering Collaborative Development Team (IXS-CDT) became the twenty-second research group to sign up for construction of x-ray beamlines at Argonne National Laboratory’s Advanced Photon Source (APS).
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Photo of Amy RosenzweigRosenzweig of Northwestern University Receives MacArthur Grant (Oct. 6)
Amy Rosenzweig, Associate Professor of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, and a member of the DuPont-Northwestern-Dow (DND) Synchrotron Research Center (sector 4 at Argonne National Laboratory's Advanced Photon Source [APS]), has been named a 2003 MacArthur Fellow.
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Image of SARS CoronavirusCrystal Structure of SARS Protease Determined Using APS (Jul. 31)
Using x-ray beams from the U.S. Department of Energy's Advanced Photon Source, Structural GenomiX, Inc., a San Diego, California-based, structure-guided drug discovery company, has completed the three-dimensional crystal structure of the main protease from the Coronavirus that causes Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome.
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HP-CAT to Lead the Way in New Research under NNSA Grant (Jul. 24)
Photo of Daniel Hauser-mann checking the spectrometerThe High Pressure Collaborative Access Team (HP-CAT) at APS sector 16 will be a primary location for research carried our under a new grant from the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). The $5.9-million, 2.75-year NNSA grant to the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., under the Stewardship Science Academic Alliances program, will fund research into the behavior of materials under extreme pressure conditions at the Carnegie/Department of Energy Alliance Center (CDAC).
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Schematic of the powder diffractometer setup.Dedicated APS Powder Diffraction Beamline Funded by DOE-BES (Jul. 23)
A new high-resolution powder diffractometer beamline will be funded by the U.S, Department of Energy's Office of Basic Energy Sciences for construction at APS sector 11-BM. The beamline proposal and subsequent funding arise from the
department's general call for new instrumentation at x-ray and
neutron facilities. This state-of-the-art, dedicated powder
instrument will be a part of APS facility beamlines that provide
a majority of beam time (80%) for general users.
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Winners Named in APS Exibit Contest (Jul. 23)
Photo of the team making final adjustmentsTwo teams of high-school students tied for first place in an interactive-exhibit design contest...
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The SPPS multilayer monochromator designed and fabricated at the APS. (Courtesy of Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory)APS Technology Supports SSRL Sub-Picosecond Photon Source (Jun. 16)
A new photon source, the Sub-Picosecond Photon Source (SPPS), that promises to image the movement of objects down to the atomic level in subpicosecond time scales...
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Cover of May 2003 issue of Mechanical EngineeringAPS Research Fuels Engineering Interest (Jun. 5)
Award-winning research on the characteristics of fuel sprays from injectors is one of the featured articles in the May 2003 issue of Mechanical Engineering and on the Web site of that magazine. The studies, carried out at APS's X-ray Operation and Research beamline 1-BM and the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source, revealed startling new information about fuel sprays, including the presence of a shockwave as the spray leaves the injector nozzle.
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Ruzicka Appointed AOD Division Director (Jun. 5)
Photo of William G. RuzickaWilliam G. Ruzicka has been appointed Director of the APS Operations Division (AOD), effective April 21, 2003. Ruzicka, who has served for 11 years as Operations Manager for the Intense Pulsed Neutron Source (IPNS), fills the position vacated by the unexpected death of
Antanas V. Rauchas in November 2002.
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Jim Viccaro (third from right, ChemMatCARS) with RBHS studentsAPS is X-ray Classroom for Students (Apr. 7)
Eleven advanced placement physics students from Riverside-Brookfield High School gained a hands-on introduction to innovative x-ray science at the Advanced Photon Source (APS)...
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Photo of BioCARS staff actively participating in the SPPS projectBioCARS Participation in the SPPS Project at SLAC/SSRL (Mar. 6)
The X-ray pulse length emitted by synchrotron sources such as the APS is determined by the electron bunch pulse length, which in turn is limited to about 100ps by essential, long-term stability requirements on the electron beam. However, many interesting structural processes in hard and soft condensed matter and in biological systems occur on time scales shorter than 100 ps...
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Photo of Efim Gluskin, Bill Tomlinson, and Murray Gibson with signed Memorandum of UnderstandingAPS, CLSI Sign MOU (Feb. 18)
Sharing the wealth of new technology and supporting new synchrotron radiation facilities has been a hallmark of the international synchrotron light-source community...
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"Nuclear Lighthouse Effect" Studies Win BESSY Prize (Jan. 29)
Experimental setup to record nuclear resonant scattering from a rotating sample. The scattered beam from the rotor is guided through an evacuated flight tube to the detector. Sample foils are contained in cylinders with diameters of a few mm.A new technique for high-resolution x-ray scattering spectroscopy developed at the Advanced Photon Source has garnered an award for innovation in synchrotron radiation research...
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A Breath of Fresh Air for Insect Physiology (Jan. 27)
Photo of the air-filled pipes in the head of a beetle, showing the trachea expanding with inhalation and contracting with exhalationA surprising insect breathing mechanism similar to the way lungs work in vertebrates has been discovered by scientists from The Field Museum in Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory, using brilliant x-ray beams from the Advanced Photon Source (APS).
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ANL LCLS Project Director Appointed (Jan. 16)
The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) is a new DOE project to construct an x-ray free-electron laser at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC)...
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