Tags
CHESS-U is taking shape
Over six days this past September, two new hutches were installed in the L0 experimental hall of Wilson Lab.
CHESS unveils fresh new website
Parallel to the CHESS-U project performing necessary equipment upgrades here at Wilson Lab, the CHESS website was also in the shop for a makeover.
Watching nanocrystals in action
The assembly of colloidal nanocrystal building blocks into ordered superlattices presents many scientifically interesting and technologically important research challenges to create programmable matter from “crystals-of-crystals”.
Lt. Gov. Hochul announces $15M from state for CHESS upgrade
Hailing the retention and creation of 250 jobs as one of its most important benefits, Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul formally announced Nov. 15 that the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS), a National Science Foundation-supported facility, is the recipient of a $15 million grant from the New York State Upstate Revitalization Initiative.
A gem of an activity
The girl scouts, who were working on earning their Radio and Wireless Technology patches, spent their Saturday at Wilson Lab building their radios under the guidance and tutelage of the Cornell students.
Associate Director Matthew Miller promoted to ASME Fellow
CHESS congratulates Professor Matthew Miller, the associate director of CHESS and the director of InSitµ@CHESS, for a recent promotion to the rank of fellow in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).
Where did those electrons go? Decades-old mystery solved
The concept of “valence” – the ability of a particular atom to combine with other atoms by exchanging electrons – is one of the cornerstones of modern chemistry and solid-state physics.
2D organic-inorganic perovskites pave the way to novel low-cost solar cells
Organic-inorganic lead iodide perovskites are a much studied materials class that have reached solar cell efficiencies above 22% – on par with amorphous silicon – in only a few years after discovery.