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Review of third and next generation synchrotron light sources

Donald H Bilderback1, Pascal Elleaume2 and Edgar Weckert3

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Synchrotron radiation (SR) is having a very large impact on interdisciplinary science and has been tremendously successful with the arrival of third generation synchrotron x-ray sources. But the revolution in x-ray science is still gaining momentum. Even though new storage rings are currently under construction, even more advanced rings are under design (PETRA III and the ultra high energy x-ray source) and the uses of linacs (energy recovery linac, x-ray free electron laser) can take us further into the future, to provide the unique synchrotron light that is so highly prized for today's studies in science in such fields as materials science, physics, chemistry and biology, for example. All these machines are highly reliant upon the consequences of Einstein's special theory of relativity. The consequences of relativity account for the small opening angle of synchrotron radiation in the forward direction and the increasing mass an electron gains as it is accelerated to high energy. These are familiar results to every synchrotron scientist. In this paper we outline not only the origins of SR but discuss how Einstein's strong character and his intuition and excellence have not only marked the physics of the 20th century but provide the foundation for continuing accelerator developments into the 21st century.


PACS

42.72.-g Optical sources and standards

03.30.+p Special relativity

29.20.db Storage rings and colliders

41.60.Ap Synchrotron radiation

Subjects

Accelerators, beams and electromagnetism

Nuclear physics

Instrumentation and measurement

Optics, quantum optics and lasers

Gravitation and cosmology

Particle physics and field theory

Dates

Issue 9 (14 May 2005)

Received 20 January 2005, in final form 17 March 2005

Published 25 April 2005



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