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ALS News
Contents
Volume 258 • October 26, 2005
ALSNews is a monthly electronic newsletter to keep users and other interested parties informed about developments at the Advanced Light Source, a national user facility located at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California. We welcome suggestions for topics and content.
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Another Users' Meeting,
Another Record Attendance

by Art Robinson

Thanks to a surge in eleventh-hour registrations, an overflow crowd of more than 400 users, staff, and vendors materialized to enjoy a successful ALS Users' Meeting, with a program chock full of science highlights and a dozen workshops, all spread over three days from October 21–22.

During the popular vendor reception and poster session,
displays spilled over from the ALS patio into Building 7.

Berkeley Lab Director Stephen Chu started off the proceedings with encouraging words about the planned onsite user lodging facility and promised his support for keeping the ALS a top user facility in all categories, from accessibility to scientific output. Acting ALS Director Janos Kirz began his report on the state of the ALS by pointedly reiterating the ALS mission: to support users in doing outstanding science in a SAFE ENVIRONMENT. He then reviewed progress on the accelerator, beamline, and science fronts, highlighting an outstanding report card from the 2005 Basic Energy Sciences (BES) review of the ALS.

Michael Lubell (City College of New York and American Physical Society) reviewed the outlook for the federal science budget, including both positive and negative factors; the bottom line to users: get politically active. In her annual "View from Washington" report, Department of Energy (DOE) Associate Director of Science for BES Pat Dehmer summarized her efforts to convince federal budget makers that, if light sources are to remain competitive, they cannot continue to operate on flat funding. At the end of her talk, she presented retiring ALS Director Daniel Chemla with a DOE Distinguished Associates Award, and the audience saluted him with a standing ovation.

Daniel Chemla receives award

Pat Dehmer presented Daniel Chemla
with a DOE Distinguished Associates Award.

In other Thursday morning presentations, ALS accelerator physicist Christoph Steier reviewed progress and plans toward the new top-off mode of operation expected to be fully operational in 2007, as well as other accelerator improvements. Users Services leader Gary Krebs described upcoming changes in the badging process, and Science Director Neville Smith unveiled a draft version of a new general sciences proposal process and invited user input. Users' Executive Committee (UEC) chair Greg Denbeaux (The University at Albany) conducted a town hall meeting that covered several issues, including candidates for the upcoming UEC election.

Thursday afternoon and Friday morning were devoted to keynote presentations and science highlights, while Friday afternoon and Saturday were dedicated to a set of 12 workshops. All talks and workshops are described on the Meeting Web site. Thursday evening saw the inauguration of "public science" lectures as part of the meeting program. Co-sponsored by the ALS and the Berkeley Lab Friends of Science, Joachim Stöhr, newly appointed director of the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, spoke to almost 200 meeting attendees and members of the public on "The Mysteries of Magnetism: From Physical Attraction to Spin Doctors."

Meeting attendees enjoyed barbecue
and corn-on-the-cob alfresco.

A pleasant California autumn evening provided the perfect environment for the now-traditional barbecue dinner on the ALS patio on Friday. Program co-chairs Simon Morton (Berkeley Lab's Physical Biosciences Division) and Jinghua Guo (ALS) then hosted the user award session. This year there were two student poster prizes: Michelle Weinberger (University of California, Los Angeles) won the first prize, sponsored by Oxford Instruments, and Benjamin Yuhas (University of California, Berkeley) took the second prize, sponsored by Vacuum Generators. Ron Slater and Ed Wong (Berkeley Lab's Engineering Division) each bagged individual Tim Renner User Services Awards.

The Halbach Award for innovative instrumentation was won by Elke Arenholz (ALS) and Soren Prestemon (Engineering Division) for the design and implementation of a vector magnetometer for soft x-ray studies. The Shirley Award for scientific achievement went to Craig Taatjes (Sandia National Laboratories), Terrill Cool (Cornell University), Philip Westmoreland (University of Massachussetts), and their colleagues for the surprising and far-reaching discovery of enols in flames. And in a special presentation, Wei-lun Chao (University of California, Berkeley, and Berkeley Lab's Center for X-Ray Optics) took possession of the Werner Meyer-Ilse prize for outstanding work by a young researcher, awarded every three years at the International X-Ray Microscopy Conference.

Disorder-induced microscopic
magnetic memory

The magnetic-recording industry deliberately introduces carefully controlled disorder into its materials to obtain the desired magnetic properties. But as the density of magnetic disks climbs, the size of the magnetic domains responsible for storage must decrease, posing new challenges. Beautiful theories based on random microscopic disorder have been developed over the past ten years. To directly compare these theories with precise experiments, an American - European team, led by researchers from the University of Washington, Seattle, first developed and then applied coherent x-ray speckle metrology to microscopic magnetic domains in a series of thin multilayer perpendicular magnetic materials of varying disorder. Their results, at odds with all previous theories, have set a new reference point for future theories. Full story.

Persistence of Return-Point Memory

Publication about this research: M.S. Pierce, C.R. Buechler, L.B. Sorensen, J.J. Turner, S.D. Kevan, E.A. Jagla, J.M. Deutsch, T. Mai, O. Narayan, J.E. Davies, K. Liu, J. Hunter Dunn, K.M. Chesnel, J.B. Kortright, O. Hellwig, and E.E. Fullerton, "Disorder-induced microscopic magnetic memory," Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 017202 (2005).

Contact: Michael S. Pierce, hatter@u.washington.edu

Crystal structure of a protein
kinase A complex

Protein kinase A (PKA) is an enzyme that regulates processes as diverse as growth, memory, and metabolism. In its unactivated state, PKA exists as a tetrameric complex of two catalytic subunits and a regulatory subunit dimer, but when the intracellular signaling molecule cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) binds to the regulatory subunit, it facilitates dissociation and activation of the catalytic subunits. While separate structures of these subunits were previously known, a group from the University of California, San Diego, is the first to determine (to a resolution of 2.0 Å) the structure of the PKA catalytic subunits bound to the regulatory subunit. The structure of the complex clarifies the mechanism for PKA inhibition, and its comparison with the structure of cAMP bound to the regulatory subunit hints at how cAMP binding drives its activation. Full story.

Regulating PKA

Publication about this research: C. Kim, N.-H. Xuong, and S.S. Taylor, "Crystal structure of a complex between catalytic and regulatory (Rla) subunits of PKA," Science 307, 690 (2005).

Contact: Susan Taylor, staylor@ucsd.edu

Engineering metal impurities in
multicrystalline silicon solar cells

Transition metals are one of the main culprits in degrading the efficiency of multicrystalline solar cells. With a suite of x-ray microprobe techniques, a multi-institutional collaboration led by researchers from the University of California, Berkeley, and Berkeley Lab studied the distribution of metal clusters in a variety of multicrystalline solar cells before and after processing. Their discovery that the size, spatial distribution, and chemical binding of metals within clusters is just as important as the total metal concentration in limiting the performance of multicrystalline silicon solar cells led to the concept of defect engineering by optimizing growth and processing sequences to trap metals in their least harmful state. Full story.

Cheaper Solar Cells?

Publications about this research: T. Buonassisi, A.A. Istratov, M.A. Marcus, B. Lai, Z. Cai, S.M. Heald, and E.R. Weber, "Engineering metal-impurity nanodefects for low-cost solar cells," Nature Materials 4, 676 (2005); T. Buonassisi, A.A. Istratov, M. Heuer, M.A. Marcus, R. Jonczyk, J. Isenberg, B. Lai, Z. Cai, S. Heald, W. Warta, R. Schindler, and E.R. Weber, "Synchrotron-based investigations of the nature and impact of iron contamination in multicrystalline silicon solar cell materials," J. Appl. Phys. 97, 074901 (2005); T. Buonassisi, M.A. Marcus, A.A. Istratov, M. Heuer, T. F. Ciszek, B. Lai, Z. Cai, and E.R. Weber, "Analysis of copper-rich precipitates in silicon: Chemical state, gettering, and impact on multicrystalline silicon solar cell material," J. Appl. Phys. 97, 063503 (2005).

Contact: Andrei A. Istratov, istratov@berkeley.edu

Protein flips lipids
across membranes

Found ubiquitously in both bacteria and humans, membrane proteins of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)–binding cassette (ABC) transporter family have been implicated in both antibiotic and cancer-drug resistance. The mechanisms used by these proteins to expel toxins from cells therefore represent key targets for the development of drugs designed to combat the growing problem of multidrug resistance. Toward this end, researchers from The Scripps Research Institute have succeeded in crystallizing MsbA—an ABC transporter protein—together with a substrate (the molecule to be transported) and a hydrolyzed (spent) form of the nucleotide ATP, the transporter's source of chemical energy. The resulting molecular complex is caught at a moment following the transporter's "power stroke," the force-generating part of the transport cycle. This snapshot suggests a mechanism by which the substrate molecule gets flipped head-over-tail from one side of the membrane to the other, on its way out of the cell. Full story.

A Lipid Flippase

Publication about this research: C.L. Reyes and G.A. Chang, "Structure of the ABC transporter MsbA in complex with ADP·vanadate and lipopolysaccharide," Science 308, 1028 (2005).

Contact: Geoffrey Chang, gchang@scripps.edu

First light at soft x-ray
femtosecond beamline

The soft x-ray (0.2- to 1.8-keV) branch of the new Ultrafast X-Ray Facility at Beamline 6.0.1.2 saw first light on October 4 and is currently undergoing commissioning. Its complementary hard x-ray (2- to 10-keV) branch is still under construction and is on schedule for commissioning in the spring of 2006. Designed for x-ray spectroscopy and diffraction with 200-femtosecond temporal resolution, Beamline 6.0.1.2 will fill a critical need for the growing ultrafast x-ray research community at the ALS. Interest in time-resolved, ultrafast science spans the fields of physics, chemistry, and biology. Examples of studies that will be possible at Beamline 6.0.1.2 include solution-phase molecular dynamics, photoinduced phase transitions in complex materials, bonding properties of matter at high energy densities, x-ray/laser ionization dynamics in atomic and molecular systems, and nonlinear laser/x-ray mixing in solids.

First light imageBeamline 6.0.1.2 is an in-vacuum insertion-device (IVID) version of the bend-magnet laser-slicing source currently in use at Beamline 5.3.1. The permanent-magnet, dual-mode (undulator/wiggler) IVID will radiate soft and hard x rays from 120 eV to 10 keV in both normal and laser-slicing modes. The device, with 50 3-cm periods and a peak magnetic field of 1.5 T, together with the addition of a new laser with a higher repetition rate, will result in a thousandfold increase in flux and brightness over the bend-magnet source. A variable-line-spacing (VLS) grating spectrograph on the soft x-ray branch will allow a complete spectrum to be recorded at once, and a streak camera will serve as the detector for measurements on picosecond time scales. Future plans call for chicaning straight section 6 to add a half-length, small-gap, elliptically polarizing undulator (EPU), resulting in a doubling of capacity as well as the ability to use polarized x rays.

Based on a proposal by principal investigators Bob Schoenlein (Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division) and Roger Falcone (University of California, Berkeley), the Ultrafast X-Ray Facility is the fruit of many years of effort by Howard Padmore, Phil Heimann, Ernie Glover, and others in the Experimental Systems Group, as well as Christoph Steier and many collaborators in the Accelerator Physics and Engineering Groups. The concept of laser slicing was developed by Alexander Zholents and Max Zolotorev of Berkeley Lab's Center for Beam Physics. The beamline is funded by DOE BES.

Contact: Robert Schoenlein, RWSchoenlein@lbl.gov

2006 Davisson-Germer Prize
awarded to Lew Cocke

Lew CockeThe American Physical Society has announced that the 2006 Davisson-Germer Prize has been awarded to ALS user C. Lewis Cocke, University Distinguished Professor in Physics and Director of the James R. MacDonald Laboratory at Kansas State University. The prestigious Davisson-Germer prize was established in 1965 by AT&T Bell Laboratories to recognize and encourage outstanding work in atomic or surface physics. Lew's citation reads: "For a sustained record of novel experimental developments and new insights into interactions of ion and photon beams with atoms and molecules." The ALS offers Lew its heartiest congratulations on this well-deserved honor.

Lew received his bachelor's degree in physics from Haverford College in 1962 and his Ph.D from the California Institute of Technology in 1967. He has received numerous awards, including the Alexander von Humboldt award and the Max Planck Research Award. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, serving as Secretary-Treasurer of the Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics. Lew's research interests focus on collisions involving multiply charged ions interacting with electrons, atoms, surfaces, and clusters, as well as the interaction of intense laser pulses with ion beams, atoms, and molecules. At the ALS, Lew and his collaborators have used a "momentum spectrometer" to measure the simultaneous momentum of charged particles ejected when a beam of ALS photons interacts with a beam of gas molecules. Highlights of this work can be found at the links below.

Gas-Phase Molecules Illuminated from Within
Explosive Experiment Explores Escaping Electrons

Reminder: Please submit your
2004–2005 publications

In preparation for the 2005 ALS Facility Report to DOE, we are asking ALS users to submit their publications of ALS-related work for the years 2004–2005. Excellent numbers may help DOE justify increased funding for our facility. Therefore we need to ensure that all published work—especially theses—undertaken in full or in part at the ALS is included in our report. We very much appreciate your efforts—it is imperative that the publications information that we present be accurate and inclusive.

To submit publications, go to the ALS Reporting Publications Web page and follow the instructions there. Be sure to search the database first to make sure your publication hasn't already been entered. When submitting a publication, if you don't have a certain piece of information (e.g., page number or month published), type "n/a" in the field. The User Services Office will attempt to track it down. Be sure you are using an up-to-date Web browser—Netscape 6 or 7 or Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.0 or greater. If you don't, you will lose data when you hit the "Back" key.

Remember, if it's on your CV, and all or part of the work was done at the ALS, it should be in our database!

Contact: Jeff Troutman, JPTroutman@lbl.gov

 

 

Another Users' Meeting, Another Record Attendance

Disorder-induced microscopic magnetic memory

Crystal structure of a protein kinase A complex

Engineering metal impurities in multicrystalline silicon solar cells

Protein flips lipids across membranes

First light at soft x-ray femtosecond beamline

2006 Davisson-Germer Prize awarded to Lew Cocke

Reminder: Please submit your 2004–2005 publications

 
News Links

Tainer, Banfield receive DOE grants: Energy Department awards $92 million for genomics research

Can an electron be in two places at the same time? Work by former ALS doctoral fellow Daniel Rolles highlighted by Max Planck Society

Quality, not quantity, determines fracture

ALS/NCEM workshop: Micromagnetic Imaging at Nanometer Resolution

 
Operations

RING STATUS

SCHEDULES

For the user runs from
September 27–October 23:

Beam reliability*: 97.7%

Completion**: 85.7%

There were no significant interruptions.

*Time delivered/time scheduled
**Percent of scheduled beam delivered without interruption

Requests for special operations use of the "scrubbing" shift should be sent to Jan Pusina (ALS-CR@lbl.gov, x4738) by 1:00 p.m. Friday.

The Accelerator Status Hotline at (510) 486-6766 (ext. 6766 from Lab phones) features a recorded message giving up-to-date information on the operational status of the accelerator.

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EDITORS
Lori Tamura
Art Robinson
Liz Moxon

DESIGNER
Greg Vierra

LBNL/PUB-889 (2005)

This work was supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. Disclaimer.