| 1st | Top synchrotron radiation facilities |
The Australian Synchrotron is a 3 GeV synchrotron radiation facility built in Melbourne, Victoria and opened on 31 July 2007. [1] [2] Designed by Architectus in conjunction with Thiess [3] , the Synchrotron building is located on the former site of the Clayton drive-in theatre on 800 Blackburn Rd, next to the Telstra research laboratories and across the road from the Monash University Clayton Campus.
The Australian Synchrotron is a Light Source facility (in contrast to a Collider). It uses particle accelerators to produce a beam of high energy electrons which are placed within a storage ring that circulates the electrons to create synchrotron light. The light is directed down separate beamlines at the end of which may be placed a variety of experimental equipment contained within the endstations.
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Electron Gun:
The electrons used to provide the synchrotron light are first
produced at the electron gun, by thermionic
emission from a heated metal cathode. The emitted electrons are
then accelerated to an energy of 90 keV (kilo-electron volts) by
a 90 kilovolt potential applied across the gun and make their way
into the Linear Accelerator.
Linear Accelerator:
The linear accelerator (or linac) uses a series
of RF
cavities, operating at a frequency of 3 GHz, to accelerate the
electron beam to an energy of 100 MeV, over a distance of around 15
metres. Due to the nature of this acceleration, the beam must be
separated into discrete packets, or 'bunches'. This bunching
process is done at the start of the linac, using several 'bunching'
cavities. The linac can accelerate a beam once every second.
Further along the linac quadrupole
magnets are used to help focus the electron beam.
Booster Synchrotron:
The booster is an electron synchrotron which takes the 100 MeV beam
from the linac and increases its energy to 3 GeV. The booster ring
is 130 metres in circumference and contains a single 5-cell RF
cavity (operating at 500 MHz) which provides energy to the electron
beam. Acceleration of the beam is achieved by a simultaneous
ramping up of the magnet strength and cavity fields. Each ramping
cycle takes approximately 1 second (for a complete ramp up and
down).
Storage Ring:
The storage ring is the final destination for the accelerated
electrons. It is 216 metres in circumference and consists of 14
nearly identical sectors. Each sector consists of a straight
section and an arc, with the arcs containing 2 dipole 'bending'
magnets each. Each dipole magnet is a potential source of
synchrotron light and most straight sections can also host an insertion
device, giving the possibility of 30+ beamlines at the
Australian Synchrotron. Two of the straight sections are used to
host the storage ring 500 MHz RF cavities, which are essential for
replacing the energy that the beam loses through synchrotron
radiation. The storage ring also contains a large number of quadrupole and sextupole
magnets used for beam focusing and chromaticity corrections. The ring is
designed to hold 200mA of stored current with a beam lifetime of
over 20 hours.
Vacuum Systems:
The electron beam is kept within a very high vacuum at all times
during the acceleration process and within the storage ring. This
vacuum is necessary as any beam collisions with gas molecules will
quickly degrade the beam quality and reduce the lifetime of the
beam. The vacuum is achieved by enclosing the beam in a stainless
steel pipe system, with numerous vacuum pump systems continually
working to keep the vacuum quality high. Pressure within the
storage ring is typically around 10-10 millibar.
Control System
Each digital and analogue I/O channel is associated with a database
entry in a customised distributed open source database system called EPICS (Experimental Physics and
Industrial Control System). The condition of the system is
monitored and controlled by connecting specialised GUIs to the specified database
entries. There are about 45,000 database entries (also known as
process variables), most of which relate to the physical I/O. About
35,000 of these are permanently archived at intervals ranging from
milliseconds to minutes. Some high level control of the
physics-related parameters of the beam is provided through MATLAB which also provides data
analysis tools and an interface with a computerised model of the
accelerator. Personnel and equipment protection is achieved through
the use of PLC-based systems, which
also transfer data to EPICS. The Beamlines also use EPICS as the
basis for their control.
An ongoing management crisis was set in motion following the sudden dismissal of the Australia Synchrotron's director, Professor Robert Lamb in late October 2009 [4] . Professor Lamb, acknowledged as one of Australia's leading scientists [5] , was seconded to the synchrotron from his position as chair of chemistry at the University of Melbourne when the Clayton complex opened in July 2007. His dismissal without explanation by the Board of management led by the chair Ms. Catherine Walter, has caused the international Science Advisory Committee to the Australian Synchrotron to threaten to resign en mass and has resulted in a work-to-rule by the staff at the facility [6] [7] .
Chair Catherine Walter has appointed former Australian of the Year Sir Gustav Nossal as head of a new advisory body, the National Science Colloquium [8] . The body is not a replacement for the Scientific Advisory Committee, and Sir Gustav's appointment does not solve the current impasse between the beamline scientists and the Scientific Advisory Committee, and the Board. The Colloquium was formed (but not announced) before the crisis and as it was not ratified by the council of members is not a properly defined committee.
Following a meeting on December 9 with synchrotron staff, in which Ms Walter refused to resign, three members of the Scientific Advisory Committee resigned their positions [9] and a further two members have since resigned, with another indicating his intention [10] . The Scientific Advisory Committee are unhappy about the actions of Ms Walter, who has failed to heed their advice, concentrating too much on promoting a corporate culture, and lowered staff morale to an all-time low. The beamline scientists have also extended their work to rule indefinitely[10]. The CFO has also tendered his resignation, citing personal reasons [11] . The State Government of Victoria, which has the largest stake in the project, so far has declined to intervene. [12]
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