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Otolith x-ray fluorescence: An effective way to study Amazon fish migration and life history
There is great need to study the life history of commercial fishes in the Amazon and other large South American basins, as there are dozens of exploited taxa with widely varying life histories that are poorly understood.

CHESS facility helps scale up solar cells
Scientists and engineers are constantly working to improve the performance of solar cells. Rather than changing their formulas by trial and error, they would like to understand the chemistry that happens as their recipes cook.

Concentrating on concentrators: Students design and test novel microfluidic ultrafiltration system for biological samples at the beamline
Biological solution scattering experiments are often the culmination of months, or even years of preparation.

With CLEO detector gone, CHESS facility looks back, ahead
Three months ago, without a whole lot of fanfare, an era in particle physics at Cornell came to an end.

Science case for CHESS-U upgrade project released
CHESS Director Joel Brock recently announced the exciting news: “Over the next two years, the CHESS-U project will transform the laboratory. We will do this by optimizing the particle accelerator for x-ray production, and enhancing our x-ray capabilities through unique technology. This upgrade will introduce new scientific possibilities for our users and the synchrotron scientists of tomorrow.”

Xraise, the CHESS outreach program, extends its reach to Puerto Rico
Universities across the country are investigating various ways to successfully recruit and retain minority students in an effort to train a more diverse pool of scholars prepared for careers in science and engineering.

Formation of high-performance photovoltaic materials from solution
Mixed organic-inorganic halide perovskite materials have been in the spotlight in the photovoltaics research community due to excellent optoelectronic properties and the potential of cost-efficient production via solution processing.

In-situ x-ray scattering studies of solvent vapor annealing reviewed
Based on research spanning more than 15 years at CHESS and at HASYLAB, Christine M. Papadakis at the Technical University of Munich (TUM), Germany, Dorthe Posselt at Roskilde University, Denmark, and CHESS staff scientist Detlef Smilgies published a comprehensive review on in-situ solvent vapor annealing processes in block copolymers, based on their own work and important contributions by other groups [1].