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Scientific Needs for Future X-ray Sources in the U.S. -- A White Paper
Author(s) -
R. W. Falcone,
J. Stöhr,
Uwe Bergmann,
J. Corlett,
J. Galayda,
J. B. Hastings,
B. Hettel,
Zahid Hussain,
Janos Kirz,
Bill McCurdy,
T. Raubenheimer,
F. Sannibale,
J.T. Seeman,
Zhilong Shen,
Bob Schoenlein,
A. Zholents
Publication year - 2008
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/941544
Subject(s) - physics , scale (ratio) , state of matter , white paper , engineering physics , political science , quantum mechanics , law
Many of the important challenges facing humanity, including developing alternative sources of energy and improving heath, are being addressed by advances that demand the improved understanding and control of matter. While the visualization, exploration, and manipulation of macroscopic matter have long been technological goals, scientific developments in the twentieth century have focused attention on understanding matter on the atomic scale through the underlying framework of quantum mechanics. Of special interest is matter that consists of natural or artificial nanoscale building blocks defined either by atomic structural arrangements or by electron or spin formations created by collective correlation effects. The essence of the challenge to the scientific community has been expressed in five grand challenges for directing matter and energy recently formulated by the Basic Energy Sciences Advisory Committee. These challenges focus on increasing our understanding of, and ultimately control of, matter at the level of atoms, electrons. and spins, as illustrated in Figure 1.1. Meeting these challenges will require new tools that extend our reach into regions of higher spatial, temporal, and energy resolution. Since the fundamental interaction that holds matter together is of electromagnetic origin, it is intuitively clear that electromagnetic radiation is the critical tool in the study of material properties. On the level of atoms, electrons and spins, x rays have proved especially valuable

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