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From rare to routine

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Abstract

The growing importance of synchrotron radiation for structural biology can be charted from the construction and use of an X-ray beam line at DESY in Hamburg, Germany in 1970, to the completion of the three third generation synchrotrons in France, the USA and Japan in the 1990s.

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Figure 1: a, The first X-ray diffraction pattern taken with synchrotron radiation; the sample was of insect flight muscle and the picture shows the 220 Å equatorial Bragg reflection.

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Correspondence to Kenneth C. Holmes.

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Holmes, K. From rare to routine. Nat Struct Mol Biol 5 (Suppl 8), 618–619 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/1312

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