General Information

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Brookhaven Lab Physicist Receives Technological Innovation Award from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

Brookhaven physicist Zheng Li receives the 2012 IEEE Technological Innovation Award for the development of a novel silicon detector. More...

Breakthrough Iron-based Superconductors Set New Performance Records

New fabrication method could advance technologies ranging from medical imaging devices to grid-scale energy storage. More...

Growing Cutting-edge X-ray Optics

Scientists use a custom-designed machine and a reprogrammed Xbox controller to create atomically precise lenses. More...

Researchers using x-rays to study a single-atom-thick layer of carbon, called graphene, have learned new information about its atomic bonding and electronic properties when the material is “doped” with nitrogen atoms. More...

For Scientists & Facility Users

Scientists

As a national user research facility funded by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science, the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) offers scientists from academia, government labs, and other institutions exciting research possibilities in a wide variety of fields. Infrared, ultraviolet, and x-ray light produced by NSLS allow scientists to examine materials and processes at a scale that is not possible at other types of research labs or facilities.

The successor to NSLS, NSLS-II is scheduled to be operating by 2015 as the world's most advanced synchrotron light source. The new facility will have extremely high brightness and flux; exceptional beam stability; and a suite of advanced instruments, optics, and detectors. Taking advantage of these new capabilities, scientists will be able to image materials with nanoscale resolution and determine chemical activity in fine detail.

At NSLS, guest scientists can choose from a range of research techniques and equipment. As an NSLS (and future NSLS-II) user, you will discover that Brookhaven Lab's synchrotron facilities can provide the tools to perform cutting-edge research that is not possible at your home institution. You will also have the support of a well-trained staff.

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Industrial Collaborators

Industrial Collaborators

GM's Joseph Ziegelbauer uses a potentiostat and galvanostat to test his electrochemical system in the new battery lab on the NSLS experimental floor.

The National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) and its future successor, NSLS-II, can help companies large and small solve research and manufacturing problems, generate new technologies and products, and stay competitive.

The Photon Sciences Directorate would like to encourage greater use of its facilities by industrial researchers and facilitate collaborations between industry and NSLS staff, as well as government and academic institutions.

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For Educators

Teachers

Teachers and students are welcome to experience science first hand at NSLS and NSLS-II. We work primarily in partnership with Brookhaven Lab's Office of Educational Programs, which coordinates programs aimed at boosting teachers' content knowledge and improving student achievement in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). These programs help motivate and prepare all students, especially minorities and females, and address the serious under representation of minorities and females in STEM careers. A diverse workforce of scientists, engineers, and educators will help keep America at the forefront of innovation. More...


Educational Programs Fact Sheets

Videos Images

For Journalists

Journalist

Exciting science is happening every day at NSLS, while construction moves ahead at NSLS-II. Journalists are invited to use the links below for the latest news and developments at both facilities. Please contact a Brookhaven media rep for more information and to arrange interviews.


News Science Highlights Images

Videos Media Contacts Construction Cams

What's a synchrotron?

General Public

The human eye can see only visible light. It comes in the form of different wavelengths. These wavelengths are what create the colors of the rainbow. Other wavelengths of lights are not visible to the human eye. Although, we cannot see them, these types of light are also used in our everyday life. For example, a TV remote control uses infrared light to adjust the volume or change the channel of the TV. Airport scanners use x-rays to scan luggage. Tanning lamps use ultraviolet light to tan the skin. Microwave ovens use microwaves to cook your food.

A synchrotron is a huge machine that produces very bright light of many different wavelengths. The light is much brighter than that found in your TV remote, microwave oven, or dentist's x-ray machine because the synchrotron beams of light are focused into very small spots. Think of a synchrotron as a giant microscope, allowing us to see matter at the atomic scale. More...

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Announcements

2013 NSLS/CFN Users' Meeting

The 2013 NSLS and CFN Joint Users' Meeting will take place at Brookhaven National Laboratory on May 20-22. This year's theme is: "Telling our story, sharing our science." For details and to register, click here.

Next Lecture

  1. FEB

    19

    Tuesday

    NSLS-II Seminar

    9:30 am, Seminar Room, Bldg. 725

    "Commissioning of the Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility"

    Tuesday, February 19, 2013, 9:30 am

    Dr. Li Haohu, Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility, China

    Abstract: Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility (SSRF) is a 3.5GeV third generation light source, one of the largest scientific facilities in China. The project started on Dec. 25, 2004, and was completed on Jan. 19, 2010. It consists of a 150MeV linac, a 180m full-energy booster, a 432m storage ring and 7 first phase beamlines. The commissioning of SSRF went smoothly. The first 3.5GeV electron beam was obtained within 60 effective working hours during the booster commissioning, and beam were stored in the Storage Ring within 3 days. The talk will be focusing on the accelerator physics part of the booster and the storage ring commissioning.

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Upcoming Workshops

MXLS-13

3/24/2013 - 3/28/2013

X9 SAXS Workbench

4/18/2013 - 4/21/2013

All Workshops »