[ '11 Schedule(PDF)1st 2nd]
 


Current Status of UVSOR

Operation Schedule

Parameters(PDF)
Insertion Devices(PDF)
Beamlines(PDF)


about us
Staff
UVSOR Katoh Lab.
UVSOR ShigemasaLab.
UVSOR Kimura Lab.
Associate Prof. Mitsuke Lab.
Prof. Yokoyama Lab.


Access
Campus Map
Accommodation

IMS


SRRT Net

Other Synchrotron Radiation Sources

Electron binding energies


UVSOR Facility
Light is called with various names such as infrared, visible, ultraviolet, vacuum-ultraviolet and X-ray, depending on its wavelength. A synchrotron light source is capable of producing light in the ultra-wide wavelength range from infrared to X-rays. Synchrotron light radiated by high energy electrons traveling in a strong magnetic field is intense and highly collimated. It is widely used in various research fields including molecular science. In IMS, a synchrotron light source has been operational since 1983. After several upgrades, it is still brightest in the world among low energy synchrotron light sources. By utilizing its excellent performance, the electronic structure that is the origin of the functionalities of solids is directly observed. This facility is called UVSOR and is used by many researchers not only from our country but also from foreign countries.
Three-dimensional angle-resolved
photoemission (3D-ARPES)
apparatus.
Fermi surface of a solid (CeSb)
derived by 3D-ARPES apparatus.
Publications
UVSOR Activty Report 2010
UVSOR Pamphlet 16.2MB

  Last updatedF10 Jun, 2011
38 Nishigo-Naka, Myodaiji, Okazaki, 444-8585, Japan Copyrights (C) 2005 UVSOR. All Rights Reserved.