TY  - EJOUR
AU  - Sobolev, Egor
AU  - Zolotarev, Sergei
AU  - Giewekemeyer, Klaus
AU  - Bielecki, Johan
AU  - Okamoto, Kenta
AU  - Reddy, Hemanth K. N.
AU  - Andreasson, Jakob
AU  - Ayyer, Kartik
AU  - Barak, Imrich
AU  - Bari, Sadia
AU  - Barty, Anton
AU  - Bean, Richard
AU  - Bobkov, Sergey
AU  - Chapman, Henry N.
AU  - Chojnowski, Grzegorz
AU  - Daurer, Benedikt J.
AU  - Dörner, Katerina
AU  - Ekeberg, Tomas
AU  - Flückiger, Leonie
AU  - Galzitskaya, Oxana
AU  - Gelisio, Luca
AU  - Hauf, Steffen
AU  - Hogue, Brenda G.
AU  - Horke, Daniel A.
AU  - Hosseinizadeh, Ahmad
AU  - Ilyin, Vyacheslav
AU  - Jung, Chulho
AU  - Kim, Chan
AU  - Kim, Yoonhee
AU  - Kirian, Richard A.
AU  - Kirkwood, Henry
AU  - Kulyk, Olena
AU  - Küpper, Jochen
AU  - Letrun, Romain
AU  - Loh, N. Duane
AU  - Lorenzen, Kristina
AU  - Messerschmidt, Marc
AU  - Mühlig, Kerstin
AU  - Ourmazd, Abbas
AU  - Raab, Natascha
AU  - Rode, Andrei V.
AU  - Rose, Max
AU  - Round, Adam
AU  - Sato, Takushi
AU  - Schubert, Robin
AU  - Schwander, Peter
AU  - Sellberg, Jonas A.
AU  - Sikorski, Marcin
AU  - Silenzi, Alessandro
AU  - Song, Changyong
AU  - Spence, John C. H.
AU  - Stern, Stephan
AU  - Sztuk-Dambietz, Jolanta
AU  - Teslyuk, Anthon
AU  - Timneanu, Nicusor
AU  - Trebbin, Martin
AU  - Uetrecht, Charlotte
AU  - Weinhausen, Britta
AU  - Williams, Garth J.
AU  - Xavier, P. Lourdu
AU  - Xu, Chen
AU  - Vartanyants, Ivan A.
AU  - Lamzin, Victor S.
AU  - Mancuso, Adrian
AU  - Maia, Filipe R. N. C.
TI  - Megahertz single-particle imaging at the European XFEL
IS  - arXiv:1912.10796
M1  - PUBDB-2024-01862
M1  - arXiv:1912.10796
PY  - 2020
AB  - The emergence of high repetition-rate X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) powered by superconducting accelerator technology enables the measurement of significantly more experimental data per day than was previously possible. The European XFEL will soon provide 27,000 pulses per second, more than two orders of magnitude more than any other XFEL. The increased pulse rate is a key enabling factor for single-particle X-ray diffractive imaging, which relies on averaging the weak diffraction signal from single biological particles. Taking full advantage of this new capability requires that all experimental steps, from sample preparation and delivery to the acquisition of diffraction patterns, are compatible with the increased pulse repetition rate. Here, we show that single-particle imaging can be performed using X-ray pulses at megahertz repetition rates. The obtained results pave the way towards exploiting high repetition-rate X-ray free-electron lasers for single-particle imaging at their full repetition rate.
LB  - PUB:(DE-HGF)25
DO  - DOI:10.3204/PUBDB-2024-01862
UR  - https://bib-pubdb1.desy.de/record/607380
ER  -