Publications

Data publikacji: 2023-01-09

SOLARIS National Synchrotron Radiation Centre in Krakow, Poland

Jakub Szlachetko, Jacek Szade, Edyta Beyer, Wojciech Blachucki, Piotr Ciochon, Paul Dumas, Kinga Freindl, Grzegorz Gazdowicz, Sebastian Glatt, Krzysztof Gula, Josef Hormes, Paulina Indyka, Agnieszka Klonecka, Jacek Kolodziej, Tomasz Kolodziej, Jozef Korecki, Pawel Korecki, Filip Kosiorowski, Karolina Kosowska, Grzegorz Kowalski, Maciej Kozak, Paulina Koziol, Wojciech Kwiatek, Danuta Liberda, Henning Lichtenberg, Ewa Madej, Anna Mandziak, Andrzej Marendziak, Krzysztof Matlak, Alexey Maximenko, Pawel Nita, Natalia Olszowska, Roman Panaś, Ewa Partyka-Jankowska, Marcel Piszak, Alexander Prange, Michal Rawski, Maciej Roman, Marcin Rosmus, Marcin Sikora, Joanna Slawek, Tomasz Sobol, Katarzyna Sowa, Nika Spiridis, Joanna Stepien, Magdalena Szczepanik, Tomasz Slezak, Tolek Tyliszczak, , Grzegorz Wazny, Jaroslaw Wiechecki, Dorota Wilgocka-Slezak, Barbara Wolanin, Pawel Wrobel, Tomasz Wrobel, Marcin Zajac, Adriana Wawrzyniak, Marek Stankiewicz

The European Physical Journal Plus 138 (2023-01-09)

Abstrakt

The SOLARIS synchrotron located in Krakow, Poland, is a third-generation light source operating at medium electron energy. The first synchrotron light was observed in 2015, and the consequent development of infrastructure lead to the first users’ experiments at soft X-ray energies in 2018. Presently, SOLARIS expands its operation towards hard X-rays with continuous developments of the beamlines and concurrent infrastructure. In the following, we will summarize the SOLARIS synchrotron design, and describe the beamlines and research infrastructure together with the main performance parameters, upgrade, and development plans.

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