Two of these beamlines are undulators: X29 is the most efficient MX
machine east of Chicago in the US, often serving three different research
groups in a day. X25 is as bright, and has counted Rod MacKinnon, Tom
Steitz, and Venki Ramakrishnan among its prize-winning users. Typical beam
sizes at these undulators are 50 microns. If your crystal is only 20
microns, we can give you a beam that size.
There are ALS-style automounters at X29 and two of our dipole beamlines,
X12-B and X12-C.
We have a new station at X26-C for the coordinated measurement of optical
absorption spectroscopic and x-ray diffraction data. Several publications
have come from this work and many projects are underway. A Raman
spectrometer is being installed now.
The PXRR is funded jointly by the NIH's National Center for Research
Resources and the DOE's Office of Biological and Environmental Research.
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Robert M. Sweet E-Dress: sw...@bnl.gov
Group Leader, PXRR: Macromolecular ^ (that's L
Crystallography Research Resource at NSLS not 1)
http://px.nsls.bnl.gov/
Biology Dept
Brookhaven Nat'l Lab. Phones:
Upton, NY 11973 631 344 3401 (Office)
U.S.A. 631 344 2741 (Facsimile)
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