Slide 15 of 29
Notes:
- National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (ìmagnet labî) user program has grown dramatically, now operating at a rate of 900 magnet-days per year
- From 1992 to 2000, the magnet lab provided 13,400 magnet pulses to users; by mid Summer of 2002, we expect to double that number
- Last year, the magnet lab hosted 150 research teams, including Bell Labs, U. Chicago, Johns Hopkins, MIT, Penn State, UC San Diego, and U. Wisconsin, as well as U. Buenos Aires, Centro Energia Atomica in Bariloche, Argentina; Charles University in Prague; Institut Laue Langevin in Grenoble; Leiden University in the Netherlands; the Max Planck Institut in Dresden; and POSTECH in South Korea.
- Publications in scientific journals have resulted from the development of a suite of experimental techniques, many of which are unique to Los Alamosí magnet lab among all the worldís pulsed magnet laboratories
- Techniques now available include magnetization, specific heat, magnetoresistance, Hall effect, electromagnetic penetration depth, ultrasonic attenuation, photoluminescence, picosecond time-resolved photoluminescence, gigahertz spectroscopy, and terahertz spectroscopy.