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Published by
 Australian Academy of Science
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Activities | Synchrotrons making the light fantastic
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- Fermilabyrinth (Fermilab, USA)
- The D Files (Daresbury Laboratory, UK)
- The atom smasher enquiry students participate in a role-play about choosing a site for an atom smasher.
- Can you be a special agent? students read background information about synchrotron radiation then answer questions about the material.
- To D or not to D students join a hypothetical panel to judge the scientific merits of projects wanting to use synchrotron beamtime.
- Exploring the material world: Three classroom teaching modules (MicroWorlds, Advanced Light Source, Berkeley Lab, University of California, USA)
Each of these modules provides background information and an activity relating to the atomic structure of materials. The modules on Kevlar and selenium present information as a series of clues to piece together.
- The MATTER Project (UK)
- Why diffraction? an interactive tutorial showing different diffraction patterns and how a wave interacts with a single particle and a solid material. Also provides an exercise asking students to match the appropriate wavelength of radiation with the objects being studied.
- Access Excellence (USA)
- Determining the structure of a molecule students create a simple molecular model, draw it, and then try to reconstruct it. This shows students the difficulty in determining the structure of molecules from X-ray diffraction patterns.
- Earth Science Educational Resource Center (Stony Brook University, USA)
- European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (France)
- Exploring matter with synchrotron light outlines the content of an educational CD-ROM that provides a virtual tour of a synchrotron. It explains how a synchrotron works and describes its many applications. 'FLASH presentation' provides a sample of the kind of material that is available on the CD, which can be purchased from the site.
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Page updated July 2006.
The Australian Foundation for Science is a supporter of Nova.
This topic is sponsored by the Australian Government's National Innovation Awareness Strategy and
the Victorian Department of Innovation, Industry and Regional Development.
© Australian Academy of Science
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