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SRC stuff logo of the Synchrotron Radiation Center, Madison.gif|200px

Synchrotron Radiation Center
[[]]
MottoIlluminating the path to scientific discovery
Established1968
Research typeSynchrotron light source
LocationStoughton, Wisconsin
Operating agency
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Websitehttp://www.src.wisc.edu/

Tantalus!

History

The Road to the SRC: 1953 to 1968

In 1953 15 universities formed the Midwest Universities Research Association (MURA) to promote and design a high energy proton synchrotron, to be built in the Midwest. With the intent of constructing a large accelerator, MURA purchased a suitable area of land with an underlying flat limestone base near Stoughton, Wisconsin, about 10 miles from the Madison campus of the University of Wisconsin. A small electron storage ring, operating at 240 Mev, was designed as a test facility to study high currents, and construction of this ring started in 1965. However, in 1963 President Johnson had decided that the next large accelerator facility would not be built at the MURA site, but in Batavia, Illinois - this became Fermilab. In 1967 MURA dissolved with the storage ring incomplete and with no further funding.

In 1966 a subcommittee of the National Research Council, which had been investigating the properties of synchrotron radiation from the 240 MeV ring, recommended it be completed as a tool for spectroscopy. A successful proposal was made to the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the ring was completed in 1968, administered by the University of Wisconsin. [1]


Tantalus: 1968-1985

[2] [3] [4]


Aladdin: 1985

[5]

Since 2010

funding problems [6]

Notable Science

The Canadian Synchrotron Radiation Facility

Notable Science

Educational Outreach

Technical description

Beamlines

Name Port assigned[7] Source Energy range (keV unless stated) Usage
10m TGM 123
4m NIM 081
6m TGM 042
Ames-Montana ERG-Seya 053
DCM 093
HERMON 033
Infrared 031
IRENI 02 Bending magnet Infrared spectromicroscopy
Mark V Grasshopper 043
PGM undulator on U3 071
Stainless Steel Seya 051
U2 VLS-PGM 041
U2 Wadsworth 041
U9 VLS-PGM 091
Undulator4m NIM on U1 VLS-PGM 011
White light 061

[1]

  1. ^ a b Lynch, D. W. (1997). "Tantalus, a 240 MeV Dedicated Source of Synchrotron Radiation, 1968-1986". Journal of Synchrotron Radiation. 4: 334–343. doi:10.1107/S0909049597011758. Cite error: The named reference "Tant" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Green, Michael A.; Huber, David L.; Rowe, Ednor M.; Tonner, Brian (1991). "The Synchrotron Radiation Center of the University of Wisconsin-Madison". Review of Scientific Instruments. 63: 1582–1583. doi:10.1063/1.1142981.
  3. ^ Moore, C. J.; Altmann, K. N.; Bisognano, J. J.; Bosch, R. A.; Eisert, D.; Fischer, M.; Green, M. A.; Hansen, R. W. C.; Himpsel, F. J.; Hochst, H. (2002). "Current status of the Synchrotron Radiation Center". Review of Scientific Instruments. 73: 1677–1679. doi:10.1063/1.1425390.
  4. ^ Kinraide, r.; Moore, C. J.; Jacobs, K. D.; Severson, M.; Bissen, M. J.; Frazer, M.; Bisognano, J. J.; Bosch, R. A.; Eisert, D.; Fischer, M. (2004). "Current Status of the Synchrotron Radiation Center". AIP Conference Proceedings. 705: 105–112. doi:10.1063/1.1757746.
  5. ^ Rowe, Ednor M. (1980). "The Aladdin electron storage ring". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 342: 334–343. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1980.tb47205.x.
  6. ^ Reich, Eugenie Samuel (2011). "US physics feels the squeeze". Nature. 471: 278. doi:10.1038/471278a.
  7. ^ "Beamline Specifications". Retrieved 2012-07-30.