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How ‘super-microscopes’ are changing the face of European science

Press Release of November 13, 2017

Free-Electron Laser at ELBE

Free-Electron Laser at ELBE; Photo: HZDR/Frank Bierstedt; Download

Brussels: 16 organisations representing 19 light sources facilities across Europe gathered to launch the LEAPS initiative and signed an agreement to strengthen their collaboration, in the presence of Robert-Jan Smits, Director General for Research and Innovation (RTD) at the European Commission, and Giorgio Rossi, Chair of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI).

LEAPS, the League of European Accelerator-based Photon Sources, aims to offer a step change in European cooperation, through a common vision of enabling scientific excellence solving global challenges, and boosting European competitiveness and integration. This will be achieved through a common sustainable strategy developed in coordination with all stakeholders, including national policy makers, user communities and the European Commission.

The light sources that form LEAPS are all accelerators-based, producing exceptionally intense beams of X-rays, ultra-violet and infrared light. They count with a community of 24 000 direct user scientists with an extended network of 35 000 researchers, among them five Nobel Prizes.

Prof. Roland Sauerbrey, HZDR's Scientific Director, at the Launch of the LEAPS initiative in Brussels on November 13, 2017

Prof. Roland Sauerbrey, HZDR's Scientific Director, at the launch of the LEAPS initiative in Brussels on November 13, 2017

Photo: LEAPS initiative

These ‘super-microscopes’ are having a huge impact on science across Europe and worldwide, as they enable insights, which are not possible with more conventional equipment - enabling research on samples in the tiniest detail, helping make invisible information strikingly visible. They are helping scientists meet the challenges we face globally in 21st century society as they are used for both basic and applied research, covering virtually all fields of science from chemistry, biology and physics, to energy, medicine, cultural heritage and engineering.

Prof Helmut Dosch, Chair of LEAPS and Director of DESY, Hamburg in Germany said: “National facilities have so far mostly been developed and operated independently of each other, yet they have much in common, because most of their scientific objectives are very similar. Ensuring that this exceptional science network and infrastructure is used effectively is core to the work of LEAPS, which is bringing together 16 organisations representing 19 facilities across Europe. This official new collaboration will become a catalyst for impact on these global challenges, a key driver for competiveness and a compelling force for closer integration and peace through scientific collaboration.”

While European light sources have been working alongside each other for years, the LEAPS collaboration represents a step change in European cooperation through achieving a common vision for world class scientific endeavouring to meet global challenges, including:

  • Consolidating and growing our 24 000 direct users and its extended network of 35 000 researchers
  • Creating a common map of the socio-economic impact of the LEAPS members
  • Driving forward the development of common enabling technology, from accelerators and beamlines, as well as taking on the challenge of ‘big data’
  • Harnessing the unique strengths of the members of LEAPS for industry and innovation both as service providers and as the inspiration for emerging technologies, to increase European competitiveness and productivity, strengthen economies and create employment
  • Creating a seamless and unified user experience between facilities, and fostering regional development
  • Growing the engagement work with students and fostering a stronger skills base across Europe as a result
  • LEAPS will further remove access barriers for industry and simultaneously increasing industry’s potential to take advantage of the available instruments and techniques to better react to the rapid changing economic environment.

Prof. Roland Sauerbrey, Scientific Director of the Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf in Germany, said: "Our research center is delighted to be part of this major new initiative to strengthen the role of light sources in science across Europe. The free-electron lasers as well as the TELBE terahertz facility at our ELBE Center for High-Power Radiation Sources belong to the most advanced scientific facilities in the world, and their pioneering capabilities are helping to keep the HZDR at the forefront of scientific research and now our work will have even wider reach as part of LEAPS and CALIPSOplus.“

The infrastructure project CALIPSOplus - Convenient Access to Light Sources Open to Innovation, Science and to the World - has been receiving funds from the European Framework Program for Research and Innovation Horizon2020 since May 2017. It is coordinated by the HZDR.

Light sources explained:

Light sources encompass both the synchrotron light sources community, which produce highly intense continuous beams, and the free-electron lasers (FELs) community, which produce high intensity pulsed laser-like beams. Both types of light source complement one another, with synchrotrons providing high-throughput and the ability to support a large community through the provision of multiple beamlines running in parallel. For experiments that require extremely high brightness and very short timescales, FELs offer these capabilities.


Media contact:

Dr. Christine Bohnet
Press spokesperson; head of HZDR communications
Phone +49 351 260-2450 or +49 160 969 288 56
Mail: c.bohnet@hzdr.de
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf | Bautzner Landstr. 400 | 01328 Dresden | Germany