TR.00: Two Decades of Synchrotron Radiation Research

Lectures

Banquet Room

Tuesday, May 25




08:25 - 08:50 AM
Introduction. S. Ealick.

08:50 - 09:30 AM TR.00.01
(W0250)
D. Peter Siddons.
Opportunities for Condensed Matter Physics using Synchrotron Radiation.

09:30 - 10:10 AM TR.00.02
(E0090)
Stephen C. Harrison.
Virus Structures and Synchrotron Radiation: Some Historical Notes and Recent Updates.

10:10 - 10:30 AM
Coffee Break.

10:30 - 11:10 AM TR.00.03
(W0035)
Sol M. Gruner.
Synchrotron Radiation and Detectors: Synergists in a Dance.

11:10 - 11:50 AM TR.00.04
(E0062)
Janet M. Smith.
Multiwavelength Anomalous Diffraction.
et al: S. Sinha, P. Rappu, P. Mantsala, H. Zalkin.

11:50 - 12:30 AM TR.00.05
(E0093)
Keith Moffat.
Nanosecond Time-Resolved X-Ray Crystallography.

14:00 - 14:40 PM TR.00.06
(E0074)
David E. Moncton.
Source Brilliance and Its Impact on New X-Ray Methods.

14:40 - 15:20 PM TR.00.07
(W0126)
Philip Coppens.
The Use of Synchrotron Radiation for Charge Density Analysis, Resonance Diffraction and the Study of Transient Species.

15:20 - 15:40 PM
Coffee Break.

15:40 - 16:20 PM TR.00.08
(W0094)
Kenneth C. Holmes.
How Synchtrotron Radiation First Got Used as a Source for X-ray Diffraction.

16:20 - 17:00 PM TR.00.09
(E0095)
Paul B. Sigler.
Synchrotrons and the Structural Biology of Post-receptor Control of Trimeric G-protein Signaling.
et al: Joel A. Hirsch, Carsten Schubert, Rachelle Gaudet.

17:00 - 17:40 PM TR.00.10
(W0039)
John Helliwell.
Two Decades of Synchrotron Radiation and Protein Crystallography.


Contact: aca-inquiries@hwi.buffalo.edu

Last updated: Tue May 18 14:58:41 EDT 1999


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