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Spontaneous Gyrotropic Electronic Order in 1?-TiSe₂

Electronic symmetry breaking in materials underlies many unconventional materials properties which can be useful in future quantum technologies employed in information technology and novel approaches to data processing.
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Elke Arenholz
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CHESS Users' Meeting - 2020

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HP Bio workshop at CHESS - MOVED TO MAY 2020

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Twisting the Helix: Salt Dependence of Conformations of RNA Duplexes

Together with DNA and proteins, RNA forms the trinity of macromolecules (large and heavy molecules) essential to all forms of life on earth.
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Step-by-Step: Revealing the mechanism of a protein-cleaving enzyme by crystallographic snapshots

These unusual enzymes have been implicated in diseases ranging from Alzheimer’s disease to malaria, type II diabetes, cancer, Parkinson’s disease, cholera and tuberculosis.
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A Winning CHESS Opening

The upgrade, which was funded by New York State and completed in early 2019, involved reconfiguring and optimizing the Cornell Electron Storage Ring for the production of X-rays and the concurrent refurbishment of the X-ray experimental areas to exploit the redesign of the storage ring.

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NSF Delegation visits CHESS

The group took an extensive tour of CHESS and met with many members of the technical, engineering scientific and administrative staff, all integral to the success of the upgrade of the facility.  After the tour, while enjoying coffee and donuts in Wilson Lab Commons with CHESS and CLASSE staff, Linda Sapochack expressed how impressed the NSF team was with the new facility, the progress made to date, and the professionalism, commitm

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Gregory VanDuyne

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NIH awards $17.4 million to Cornell for CHESS subfacility

To understand these biological processes, researchers have been using the high-energy X-rays at the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS). These intense beams of light are critical to solving the structure of these proteins, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) will help ensure that this research continues.

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2019 CHESS Users' Meeting and Workshops

Meeting Reports

    On June 4th, 2019, exactly one year to the day after the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS) shut down for the CHESS-U upgrade project, the CHESS Users’ Meeting attracted a record number of 225 registered participants to the Cornell campus to look back at major milestones of the project and to discuss X-ray science enabled by the ambitious upgrade.

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