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A HUGE X-RAY-GENERATING MACHINE, BUILT INSIDE AN 844-METRE RINGED TUNNEL IN FRANCE, COULD PROVIDE SCIENTIFIC INSIGHT INTO CORONAVIRUS. Built in south east France, it is the fourth-generation
European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF-Extremely Brilliant Source, to give it its official name), and the first of its kind in the world. The machine can generate X-ray beams 100
times brighter than its predecessor and 10 trillion times brighter than ordinary medical X-rays found in hospitals. It replaces the third-generation synchrotron, which was located inside the
same tunnel and closed in 2018. Delphine Chenevier, head of communication at the ESRF, said we should imagine it like a “super microscope”. It allows scientists to analyse matter at a
nano-level and can be used, for example, to perform a virtual autopsy of a mummy while it is still in a sarcophagus, or create a 3D scan of a tyrannosaurus rex skull, down to the growth
lines of its teeth. It can also be used to better understand the processes of infections, such as coronavirus. “We have some ongoing papers, so I can’t say a lot about that,” Ms Chenevier
told Connexion. She did say, though, that some scientists are looking at proteins of the virus and trying to understand how they interact with human cells. ‘MIRACLE MOLECULE’ EFFECTIVE
AGAINST COVID FOUND IN LILLE “We are going deep into the matter,” she said. Helmut Dosch, vice-chair of the ESRF, said the technology “opens the door to revolutionary new insights into the
molecular machinery of complex materials and biological systems. This is the new tool for the design of future technologies and better drugs, and thus of highest relevance for the future of
the European society,” he said. The synchrotron, located in Grenoble, is funded by 22 countries, including France and the UK. Ms Chenevier said that 10,000 scientists come to use the
technology for various projects every year. Scientists can use it for free and are awarded access based on scientific merit.