Abstract

There was plenty of good news last month for British scientists who perform experiments at large scientific facilities in the UK and Europe. On 2 April the government announced that it plans to spend £11.5m on R&D for a new fourth-generation light source (4GLS) at the Daresbury Laboratory (see page 7). A week later it confirmed that the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory would receive £100m over six years to build a second “target station” at the ISIS neutron source. And from next January the UK will resume its status as an equal partner with France and Germany in the Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL) neutron source in Grenoble, France.

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