Synchrotron and light-source techniques already appear throughout African research — in crystallography, spectroscopy, imaging and materials science. The demand is here; what is missing is a facility on the continent to meet it.
The techniques in use
The synchrotron methods African researchers rely on, and the overseas facilities their work currently depends on.
Existing demand, off-continent supply
The pattern is striking: African researchers are already producing synchrotron-enabled science — but almost entirely on instruments thousands of kilometres away. Every mention of a foreign facility is a beamtime trip an African light source could host at home, with all the training, retention and cost-of-access benefits that implies. And the breadth of fields below shows the demand reaches far beyond physics.
The breadth of fields a light source serves
From biology and chemistry to medicine, heritage and materials — the disciplines drawing on light-source science.