May 28 - The strongest X-ray beam in the world.
Physics Friday Colloquia
Physics Friday Colloquia
Lectures
Ressurspublisering
Speaker: Prof. Robert Feidenhans’l from University of Copenhagen, Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark. European XFEL Schenefeld, Germany.
Time: 10:15-11:00
Place: R60
Title: X-ray Lasers: The strongest X-ray beam in the world
Host: Prof. Dag Werner Breby, Xray physics group, NTNU, Trondheim.
Abstract: Hard X-ray Free Electron (XFEL) lasers provide extremely intense and ultra-short X-ray pulses that are ideal to investigate structure and dynamics of matter at atomic time scales. X-ray free electron lasers have been in operation for more than 15 years now and have shown to have a wide range of areas of applications in physics, chemistry, materials and structural biology.
European XFEL is one of the most recent large-scale research infrastructure in Europe and has been operating now for nearly 7 years. The facility includes a 3.5 km long tunnel with a 2 km long superconducting accelerator from DESY in Hamburg/Bahrenfeld to Schenefeld in Schleswig-Holstein where the experimental hall with 7 experimental instruments is placed. The instruments offer a wide range of experimental capabilities.
In my talk I will present the main principles of the science that can be performed, how experiments are different from synchrotron radiation experiments and how they are similar. Examples will be given from recent experiments from European XFEL in various areas of science
Previous Friday Colloquia
Previous Friday Colloquia