Canadian Light Source looks ahead to major upgrades, milestones in 2025
Research has wound down and staff at Canada’s only synchrotron are getting ready for the holidays.
But the new year promises to be an exciting one at the Canadian Light Source (CLS).
With more than a thousand different users coming through the doors from nine different provinces and 28 different countries in 2024, a variety of critical questions to intricate problems were answered on one of the 22 beamlines.
“We can look inside matter,” said Ingrid Pickering, chief science officer at CLS. “We can look inside materials in a way that you can’t do anywhere else in Canada. So, it’s incredibly valuable to so many different areas of research.”
The team at CLS focus on four strategic areas of study.
“We have advanced materials, we have environment, we have agriculture, and then we also have health,” she said. “And all of those resonate in many ways with many people.”
According to the CLS annual report, 61 per cent of research time was spent on advanced materials. Equal portions were spent on health and the environment, with agriculture taking nine per cent of the total research time.
From looking at seeds to improve crops, finding trace elements of concern in the environment or health topics like osteoporosis or heart disease, Pickering says the energy in the facility is infectious when users are hard at work on the beamlines.
“We have 22 stations that run simultaneously, so all the time we have a whole spectrum of science coming from different places,” Pickering told CTV News. “So, this wonderful variety of things happening all the time simultaneously, and that’s one of the beauties of a facility like this. It draws in people from all sorts of disciplines, and in some ways that is this melting pot, this bringing together of people. Bringing together of keen minds, to wrestle with challenges and to understand them, and to provide the answers with challenges that are of great concern to people here in Saskatchewan and in Canada.”
Pickering says the machines are so expensive to run that no graduate student or researcher would be able to afford the access time, so it’s only $1 per eight-hour shift.
“I like that, because that means if your science is good enough, you can come no matter what your means,” she said.
The trade off is that researchers publish their findings publicly.
If private industries want to perform research but protect their findings, those clients can pay for the access and privacy of their data at a cost.
With countless upgrades over the years, one key piece is being completely replaced.
The facility has been shut down for six months while staff install a new linear accelerator (LINAC).
“The LINAC is sort of the heart of the machine,” she said. “It’s deep underground so we can’t see where it is, but it’s a long series of tubes, if you like, to accelerate the electrons up to a very fast speed before they come up to this level. Then they get injected first into the booster ring, which is the central ring, and then come into the storage ring which is the outer ring. From there, as they’re bent around corners, they give off light, and then the light comes down fancy tubes to scientists, who use the light to discover things about their samples.”
The original LINAC has been in operation for decades, but maintenance was becoming more expensive than a new unit.
“The original LINAC actually dates back to the 1960s,” she said. “If you think about technology in general, that’s very, very old.”
With the excitement of another year of research ahead, Pickering says 2025 has something else in store for the CLS.
“We’re also looking forward to a little bit of an anniversary,” she said. “It will be our 20th anniversary of the first user of the Canadian Light Source.”
The new LINAC is expected to be online early next year.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Trudeau considering his options as leader after Freeland quits cabinet, sources say
Chrystia Freeland, Canada's finance minister, said in an explosive letter published Monday morning that she will quit cabinet. Here's what happened on Monday, Dec. 16.
'We're not united': Liberal caucus meets, as PM Trudeau faces fresh calls to resign in light of Freeland's departure
The federal Liberals called an emergency caucus meeting Monday night, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced renewed calls from some members of his party to resign. As MPs emerged, the message was mixed.
'Eventful day,' Trudeau says after Chrystia Freeland quits cabinet, LeBlanc tapped to replace her
In a stunning move, Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland announced her resignation from Justin Trudeau's cabinet on Monday, after the prime minister told her he no longer wanted her in the top economic post. After hours of turmoil, Dominic LeBlanc, was sworn-in as her replacement in the finance portfolio.
Feds deliver fall economic statement with $61.9B deficit for 2023-24, amid political turmoil
Amid the news that Chrystia Freeland has resigned from her cabinet position as finance minister, the Department of Finance on Monday unveiled the long-anticipated fall economic statement, which reports a deficit of $61.9-billion for 2023-24.
W5 Investigates Connecting the dots on a landlord scam: how clues revealed a prolific con artist at work
In part one of a three-part investigation, W5 correspondent Jon Woodward reveals how a convicted con artist bilked dozens of people in a landlord scam.
Judge rules Trump does not have presidential immunity protections in hush money conviction
Donald Trump's felony conviction in the New York hush money case should not be tossed out because of the Supreme Court's ruling on presidential immunity.
Canadian hero Terry Fox being featured on next $5 bill
The federal government is paying tribute to Canadian hero Terry Fox by featuring him on the next $5 bank note, officials revealed Monday.
Wisconsin school shooter who killed teacher, student was 17-year-old girl, police say
A teenage student opened fire with a handgun Monday at a Christian school in Wisconsin, killing a teacher and another teenager during the final week before Christmas break. The shooter also died, police said.
Travel risk: Which countries does Canada recommend avoiding?
Canadians planning to travel abroad over the holidays should take precautionary steps to ensure they're not unintentionally putting themselves in harm's way.