Special Post-Semester Colloquium
SESAME - A
3rd
Generation Synchrotron Light Source Promoting Peace and Understanding
through Scientific Cooperation in the Middle
East
Prof. Herman Winick SLAC,
National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford CA
Developed under the auspices of UNESCO and modeled on CERN, SESAME
(Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the
Middle East) is an international research center in construction in
Jordan. It will enable world class research by scientists from the
region, reversing the brain drain. It will also build bridges between
diverse societies, contributing to a culture of peace through
international cooperation in science. The centerpiece is a synchrotron
light source originating from BESSY I, a gift by Germany.
The upgraded machine, a 2.5 GeV 3rd Generation Light Source
(133m circumference, 26nm-rad emittance and 12 places for insertion
devices), will provide light from infra-red to hard X-rays, offering
excellent opportunities to train local scientists and attract those
working abroad to return. The SESAME Council meets twice each year and
presently has nine Members: Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Israel,
Jordan, Pakistan, Palestinian Authority, Turkey. This talk will review
the origins and present status of the project and a strategic plan for
the start of operation in 2014.
Host:
Prof. Moshe Paz-Pasternak, x7267
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