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Overview
The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), a directorate of SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, is an Office of Science User Facility operated for the U.S. Department of Energy by Stanford University. As the world's most powerful X-ray laser, the LCLS creates unique light that can see details down to the size of atoms and processes that occur in less than one tenth of a trillionth of a second. At these unprecedented speeds and scales, the LCLS is embarking on groundbreaking research in physics, structural biology, energy science, chemistry and many other diverse fields.
New User Registration | Submit Proposals | User Check-In
Proposals, safety training, user registration and user check-in are centralized to ensure prompt and efficient service to our users. A call for proposals will be solicited twice per year, and a successful proposal will be eligible to receive beam time about 9 months after being submitted.
Instruments | Labs | Schedules | Status | LCLS-II
LCLS exploits the free-electron laser (FEL) process, in which a pulse of high-energy electrons traveling through a very long periodic magnet structure creates x-rays and then coherently amplifies their intensity by many orders of magnitude. The SLAC linear accelerator is uniquely capable of producing the intense, high-energy electrons required to drive such an x-ray source.
Highlights | Publications | Faculty
LCLS is a unique x-ray source, very different from a conventional storage ring source. The FEL x-ray wavelength, intensity, and pulse duration can be tailored to meet the specific needs of each experiment and modified time in response to new discoveries.
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