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Ambitious Upgrade Program Launched By The ESRF

Main Category: Radiology / Nuclear Medicine
Also Included In: Biology / Biochemistry;  IT / Internet / E-mail
Article Date: 30 Nov 2008 - 1:00 PST

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More than ten thousand scientists across Europe will profit from new investments in the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) approved today. Over the next seven years, unique new experimental facilities for research with X-rays will come into operation. This decision, taken by the ESRF Council, representing the 19 countries financing the ESRF, confirms Europe's vision to expand its global leadership in photon science.

On 24-25 November 2008, the 50th Council meeting of the ESRF approved a 10% budget increase for 2009, to start a 177 million Euros Upgrade Programme over the next seven years (2009-2015). The main element of this programme is the development of new world-class experimental stations (beamlines) which will gradually enter into service as of 2011.

The ESRF Upgrade Programme builds on the fact that no other research infrastructure is growing faster than light sources: since 1994 when the ESRF was inaugurated, more than twenty new synchrotrons opened in Europe, the US and Asia. They produce cutting-edge science, illustrated by the publication of at least one paper on average in every single issue of Science and Naturein 2007. As much as 20% of this global scientific output originated at the ESRF and much of it is relevant to everyday life. Whether it relates to promising targets for a new drug, candidate materials for hydrogen storage in cars, dust grains collected in outer space or liquid-crystal photovoltaic cells, there is a high probability that such research includes experiments at the ESRF to determine structures and properties at the atomic scale with unequalled resolution and accuracy.

"I am convinced that the Upgrade Programme will ensure the competitiveness of the ESRF for the benefit of Europe and European science" says Professor Robert Feidenhans'l, Deputy Director of the Niels-Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and Chairman of the ESRF Council. The five key targets of the Upgrade Programme are: "It was a challenging task to satisfy the needs of a huge and varied scientific community from many countries, and even more challenging to strike a balance between ambition and affordability. I am very gratefull to our member countries. Despite a difficult funding context, they have given the green light for our Upgrade Programme, which will ensure a very bright future for the ESRF", says Professor Bill Stirling, Director General of the ESRF.

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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Source: Montserrat Capellas
European Synchrotron Radiation Facility




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