 So we've just won this new NSF award. We're one of only a few in the country out of a couple of hundred people who applied And to give you an idea of the scale of that there are 50 people and seven institutions participating in this with ASU in the lead. What we're building here is we we call an X-Fell which stands for X-Ray Free Electron Laser. We've shrunk down the the very large machines to something that we can have here in the basement of Biodesign. So I like to think of the CX-Fell as a scalpel compared to the hammer that's the big machines. But our dream really is to convert that into a laser to shrink the X-Fells down to a size that we can handle. And so that's our second phase where we're about to enter a significant design study to basically dot all the i's and cross all the t's so that we can upgrade from the CX-LS to the CX-Fell. But it takes only still pictures and what we really want are movies. We want to see how materials change. We want to see chemical reactions as they occur or all these kinds of excitations that lead to new phenomena like new quantum effects and materials that could really advance energy conservation and new forms of computing. And in order to do that we need really short pulses of X-rays. With the CX-LS this first machine that we're building the very first X-ray experiments that we'll do are in something called phase contrast medical imaging. And we think that by doing this we can image things that you can't see with X-rays today. Things like soft tissue injuries that happen to our soldiers, brain degeneration. So anytime that there's soft tissues involved you know tendons blood vessels plaques and blood vessels we will be able to sensitively detect that inside a body. ASU of course has just yet again won the most innovative university award from US News and World Report and this project exemplifies that that can-do attitude. You know it starts with President Michael Crowe. Anytime you want to do something new nobody's done it you're not following a recipe you have to take risks and get out there and innovate. It takes you know bright thinking, it takes a conservative approach, but also the willingness to take the leap and not just copy others. And so that spirit is very much alive here at ASU and I think this project really exemplifies it.