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John Womersley

The Science and Technology Facilities Council and

Nuclear Physics

John WomersleyDirector, Science Programmes

October 2008

10 -6m 1m

103m10 7m

ClimateEnergyEnvironment

Health, Security,the Economy, Education

10 -18m

1026m

Particle physic

s

Astronomy

Searching fo

r life

FacilitiesCompetenciesS&I Campuses

STFC in

partnersh

ipSTFC leads

Nuclear Physics

The UK has an active research community despite hosting no accelerator facility

Top 16 research themes from 2007 grants round:

JYFL

Theory

Isolde

JLAB

Future direction

A new generation of accelerators able to make beams of unstable nuclei are now becoming available

Opens an important new window to explore why atomic nuclei exist, how the forces that hold them together behave, and how the chemical elements on which life depends were made in stars.

We will focus our investment in nuclear physics on the highest priority programmes at international accelerator facilities - notably we will participate in the new Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) at GSI in Germany– Shifts emphasis from exploitation to construction

AGATA

£4.1M approved over 4 years contribution to the construction of the first 1pi of the 4

pi detector Formal grant announcements soon Liverpool, Manchester, Daresbury, UWS, Surrey, York 11 academics, 3 PDRAs (new positions), ~4 FTE

technical effort, 3 students.

NuSTAR

£9.5M approved over 6 years Expecting to fund R3B and HISPEC (some flexibility to

swap WPs with other countries to allow UK to maintain presence in DESPEC or LaSPEC)

Negotiations ongoing. Will involve at least 6 institutions.

PANDA

£2.7M approved over 6 years Magnet construction; Disc DIRC decision pending. Involves Glasgow + potentially Edinburgh

FAIR

Launch event November 2007 Contributing through NuSTAR, PANDA (and work on

AIDA which was funded through an EPSRC grant). FAIR GmbH to be set up by early 2009?

John Womersley

LHC

Our highest priority in particlephysics is the Large Hadron Collider at CERN - its results will be transformative.

The UK plays a strong and central role: two of the LHC experiments are UK-led.

The UK research community has been a major player in constructing the LHC and the advanced computing infrastructure to handle the data; we will support its exploitation of the exciting results

LHC start-up

The first beam circulated in the LHC on September 10th, to enormous media interest

However, magnet problems mean the programme won’t get underway properly until 2009

ALICE

Relativisitic heavy ion collisions at LHC

Boulby Underground Laboratory

NP groups involved in dark matter searches Interest in using Boulby for a nuclear astrophysics

experiment

Neutrinos

The recent discovery that neutrinos have mass and mix with each other may ultimately account for the very existence of our universe.

We are taking this area of science forward with a programme of– accelerator neutrino experiments including a

significant role in the T2K experiment in Japan, which is due to come on-line in 2009;

– non-accelerator experiments including R&D towards the SuperNEMO experiment, which will test whether neutrinos and anti-neutrinos are actually the same thing.

Accelerator Research

Accelerator technology is a key enabler across a large fraction of our research– Particle and nuclear physics– Synchrotrons and free electron light sources– Neutron sources

In this area we support– Design studies for New Light Source project and for a

future Neutrino Factory– Operation of test facilities - ERLP/ALICE, EMMA, MICE– Work on high power proton accelerators– Work on novel techniques (FFAG…) and underlying

technologies (SCRF…)– The Cockcroft and Adams Institutes, ASTeC, and

university groups

John Womersley

Understanding our place in the universe

Wakeham Review of Physics

Concerns about training and skills in nuclear disciplines

The Panel recommends that RCUK develop a review of the priorities in nuclear physics research to ensure they best match the needs of the UK.

RCUK accepts this recommendation, and over the next year STFC and EPSRC will jointly review the research portfolio in nuclear physics, engineering and related areas to assess how they can best support the skills needs of the UK.

John Womersley

Interdisciplinary research facilities

Opening the door to Science and

Innovation

Harwell

Daresbury

Science and Innovation Campuses

Develop the Science and Innovation Campuses at Harwell and Daresbury as focal points for collaboration and knowledge exchange with industry and academic researchers,

Should also be gateways to our in-house expertise and that of the communities we support

We will increasingly try to focus our technology competencies on an outward facing collaborative role

Gateway Centres

Funding for three new centres has been earmarked from the large facilities capital fund

Detector Systems Centre - advanced detector technology

Hartree Centre – a step-change in modelling and simulation

Imaging Solutions Centre – transforming “facilities access” into “solutions access”

To follow: Space Centre – a new space centre for the UK Joint Institute for Materials Design – integrating

materials innovation with advanced characterization

AdvisoryPanels

AGP PPRP

PPGP

NPGP

ASTAB

Accelerator Science and Technology Advisory Board

GrantsPanels

Projects Review Panels

Science Board

PPAN PALSScience

Committees

ExecutiveInternational

Science Advisory

Committee

CouncilISAC

FDRP

AdvisoryPanels Advisory

Panels

AdvisoryPanels

John Womersley

STFC facilities in the roadmap:

The Daresbury and Harwell Science and innovation campusesDiamond Beamlines Phase IIIISIS - TS2 instrumentation (Phase III)ESRF upgrade XFELDiode Pumped Optical Laser for Experiments (DIPOLE) Extreme Light Infrastructure (ELI) European Extremely Large TelescopeFAIRSKANew Light Source projectEuropean 3rd Generation Gravitational Wave Observatory Neutrino Factory Future Particle Physics CollidersUnderground Science InitiativesHiPER Next generation neutron sources

Questions, comments?Your input is welcome:

john.womersley@stfc.ac.uk 01793 442622

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