Montse Pont
(CELLS-ALBA)
16/09/2014, 09:00
Contributed
Synchrotron light sources (LS) have become the workhorse of research infrastructures all over the world. With more than 70 light sources, each providing several thousands of hours of beamtime per year which allow research to be conducted in multiple areas of science and resulting in several thousands of publications per year, synchrotron light sources have become indispensable research...
Wataru Yokota
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
16/09/2014, 09:20
Contributed
The Takasaki Ion Accelerators for Advanced Radiation Application (TIARA) is an ion beam accelerator complex consisting of a K110 cyclotron and three electrostatic accelerators, which is dedicated to R & D on materials and biotechnology. It provides, for example, microbeams/single-ion hits for irradiation/analysis with high-spatial resolution and scanned/defocused beams for uniform and...
Lucile Beck
(CEA)
16/09/2014, 09:40
Contributed
The Joint Accelerators for Nanosciences and NUclear Simulation (JANNUS) project was started in France in 2002 in the frame of collaboration between the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) and The National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS). Due to the scientific skills developed for a long time, two experimental sites were considered: (1) at Saclay, three...
Sandor Biri
(Institute for Nuclear Resarch (Atomki) Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
16/09/2014, 10:00
During the 60-year history of the Atomki majority of the research have been based on the particle accelerators of the institute. The accelerators served the requirements of the users in different fields of atomic physics, nuclear physics and applications. In the first decades each accelerator belonged to that department which was the main user of the given facility. In 2009 however a new...