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Miller Group Research Featured in Metallurgial and Materials Transactions 50th Anniversary Collection
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions is one of the main international journals in the field of structural materials. The journal invited a set of papers for their 50th anniversary edition, including one from Matthew Miller's group.
September 2020 Message from the Directors
Dear Colleagues,
At Cornell, the fall semester began on September 2nd with a hybrid approach to teaching (in-person and online), robust virus testing, and modifications to the academic calendar allowing students to return home for Thanksgiving and then finish the semester on-line. Cornell provides information on its web site related to COVID-19 and the status Cornell Ithaca campus.
Minimizing Deviations: Improving Beam Stability at CHESS
Particle storage rings are highly complex scientific instruments and minute changes in temperature, position or current through one of its many magnets can have a large impact on the position of the particle beam. At CHESS, the accelerator group works tirelessly to even further improve the beam position stability and with that to enhance experimental capabilities at the beamlines.
In-person or Online, Cornell’s Summer Research Internships Prove Successful
The COVID-19 pandemic halted plans to host annual on-campus summer research experiences for undergraduates from institutions across the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Cornell faculty, postdoctoral scholars, and graduate student mentors, however, quickly pulled together to shift course and move these programs online, allowing about 90 undergraduates to experience virtual research at Cornell.
Biology Under Pressure: Beta-lactoglobulin survives under pressures as high as 9000 bar
To study how protein structures are impacted by external pressure a team of researchers developed a novel diamond anvil cell optimized for the study of macromolecules at external pressures up to 12kbar at the NSF, NIH and NY State supported FlexX beamline.
Ken Finkelstein Retires after 32 years at CHESS
In February 1988, Ken first arrived at CHESS with his first assignment: to build a wiggler. Since that time, Ken has been instrumental in keeping CHESS at the forefront of X-Ray emission spectroscopy, and that first wiggler (for many years called F line wiggler) is still in the tunnel generating x-rays for Sector 1. Ken is now retiring, leaving his mark on not only CHESS, but the synchrotron community at large.
SERCCS Student Highlight: Samuel Barton
“I’m helping build this, but I’m also benefiting from it...the better job I do, the more information I have."
CHESS Awarded Research Advanced by Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering (RAISE) Grant
The collaboration created by RAISE converges structural materials data collected from the FAST and SMB beamlines at CHESS with the new technologies being developed at NSF High Performance Computing sites to create a Science Gateway.