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Minutes of the High Energy Physics Advisory Panel Meeting February 14-15, 2008 Palomar Hotel, Washington, D.C
Minutes of the High Energy Physics Advisory Panel Meeting February 14-15, 2008 Palomar Hotel, Washington, D.C. HEPAP members present: Jonathan A. Bagger, Vice Chair Lisa Randall Daniela Bortoletto Tor Raubenheimer James E. Brau Kate Scholberg Patricia Burchat Melvyn J. Shochet, Chair Robert N. Cahn Sally Seidel Priscilla Cushman (Thursday only) Henry Sobel Larry D. Gladney Maury Tigner Robert Kephart William Trischuk William R. Molzon Herman White Angela V. Olinto Guy Wormser (Thursday only) Saul Perlmutter HEPAP members absent: Hiroaki Aihara Joseph Lykken Alice Bean Stephen L. Olsen Sarah Eno Also participating: Charles Baltay, Department of Physics, Yale University Barry Barish, Director, Global Design Effort, International Linear Collider William Carithers, Physics Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Tony Chan, Assistant Director for Mathematics and Physical Sciences, National Science Foundation Glen Crawford, Program Manager, Office of High Energy Physics, Office of Science, Department of Energy Joseph Dehmer, Director, Division of Physics, National Science Foundation Persis Drell, Director, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Thomas Ferbel, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester Marvin Goldberg, Program Director, Division of Physics, National Science Foundation Paul Grannis, Department of Physics and Astronomy, State University of New York Michael Harrison, Physics Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory Abolhassan Jawahery, BaBar Collaboration Spokesman, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Steve -
Highlights Se- Mathematics and Engineering— the Lead Signers of the Letter Exhibit
June 2003 NEWS Volume 12, No.6 A Publication of The American Physical Society http://www.aps.org/apsnews Nobel Laureates, Industry Leaders Petition April Meeting Prizes & Awards President to Boost Science and Technology Prizes and Awards were presented to seven- Sixteen Nobel Laureates in that “unless remedied, will affect call for “a Presidential initiative for teen recipients at the Physics and sixteen industry lead- our scientific and technological FY 2005, following on from your April meeting in Philadel- ers have written to President leadership, thereby affecting our budget of FY 2004, and focusing phia. George W. Bush to urge increas- economy and national security.” on the long-term research portfo- After the ceremony, ing funding for physical sciences, The letter, which is dated April lios of DOE, NASA, and the recipients and their environmental sciences, math- 14th, also indicates that “the Department of Commerce, in ad- guests gathered at the ematics, computer science and growth in expert personnel dition to NSF and NIH,” that, Franklin Institute for a engineering. abroad, combined with the di- “would turn around a decade-long special reception. The letter, reinforcing a recent minishing numbers of Americans decline that endangers the future Photo Credit: Stacy Edmonds of Edmonds Photography Council of Advisors on Science and entering the physical sciences, of our nation.” The top photo shows four of the five women recipients in front of a space-suit Technology report, highlights se- mathematics and engineering— The lead signers of the letter exhibit. They are (l to r): Geralyn “Sam” Zeller (Tanaka Award); Chung-Pei rious funding problems in the an unhealthy trend—is leading were Burton Richter, director Michele Ma (Maria-Goeppert Mayer Award); Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat physical sciences and related fields corporations to locate more of emeritus of SLAC, and Craig (Heineman Prize); and Helen Edwards (Wilson Prize). -
Report on HEPAP Activities
Report on HEPAP activities Mel Shochet University of Chicago 6/4/09 Fermilab Users Meeting 1 What is HEPAP? High Energy Physics Advisory Panel • Advises the DOE & NSF on the particle physics program. • Federal Advisory Committee Act rules – Public meetings – US members are Special Government Employees on meeting days. • Subject to federal conflict-of-interest rules • “Special” ⇒ paycheck = $0.00 – Appointed by DOE Under-Secretary for Science & NSF Director – Reports to Assoc. Dir. for OHEP & Asst. Dir. Math & Phys. Sciences – Broad membership: subfield, univ & labs, demographics (geography,…) • Members don’t serve as representatives of constituencies; advise on the health of the entire field. • Foreign members provide information on programs in Europe & Asia 6/4/09 Fermilab Users Meeting 2 Current Membership • Hiroaki Aihara, Tokyo • Daniel Marlow, Princeton • Marina Artuso, Syracuse • Ann Nelson, Washington • Alice Bean, Kansas • Stephen Olsen, Hawaii • Patricia Burchat, Stanford • Lisa Randall, Harvard • Priscilla Cushman, Minn. • Kate Scholberg, Duke • Lance Dixon, SLAC • Sally Seidel, New Mexico • Sarah Eno, Maryland • Melvyn Shochet, Chicago • Graciela Gelmini, UCLA • Henry Sobel, Irvine • Larry Gladney, Penn • Paris Sphicas, CERN • Boris Kayser, FNAL (DPF) • Maury Tigner, Cornell • Robert Kephart, FNAL • William Trischuk, Toronto • Steve Kettell, BNL • Herman White, FNAL • Wim Leemans, LBNL 6/4/09 Fermilab Users Meeting 3 Meetings • 3 meetings per year • Agenda – reports from the funding agencies on budgets & their impact, recent events, successes and problems – reports from specialized subpanels that need HEPAP approval to become official government documents (ex. P5) – reports from other committees that impact HEP (ex. EPP2010) – informational reports on issues that might arise in the future (ex. -
Minutes High Energy Physics Advisory Panel October 22–23, 2009 Hilton Embassy Row Washington, D.C
Draft Minutes High Energy Physics Advisory Panel October 22–23, 2009 Hilton Embassy Row Washington, D.C. HEPAP members present: Hiroaki Aihara Wim Leemans Marina Artuso Daniel Marlow Alice Bean Ann Nelson Patricia Burchat Paris Sphicas Lance Dixon Kate Scholberg Graciela Gelmini Melvyn J. Shochet, Chair Larry Gladney Henry Sobel Boris Kayser Maury Tigner Robert Kephart William Trischuk Steven Kettell Herman White HEPAP members absent: Priscilla Cushman Lisa Randall Sarah Eno Sally Seidel Stephen Olson Also participating: Barry Barish, Director, Global Design Effort, International Linear Collider Frederick Bernthal, President, Universities Research Association Glen Crawford, HEPAP Designated Federal Officer, Office of High Energy Physics, Office of Science, Department of Energy Joseph Dehmer, Director, Division of Physics, National Science Foundation Cristinel Diaconu, Directeur de Recherche, IN2P3/CNRS, France Robert Diebold, Diebold Consulting Marvin Goldberg, Program Director, Division of Physics, National Science Foundation Judith Jackson, Director, Office of Communication, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Young-Kee Kim, Deputy Director, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory John Kogut, HEPAP Executive Secretary, Office of High Energy Physics, Office of Science, Department of Energy Dennis Kovar, Associate Director, Office of High Energy Physics, Office of Science, Department of Energy Kevin Lesko, Nuclear Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Marsha Marsden, Office of High Energy Physics, Office of Science, -
Lab Partners: NSF and DOE
Volume 19 FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1996 Number 7 Lab Partners: NSF and DOE by Leila Belkora, Office of Public Affairs experiments have had co-spokesmen from NSF- funded university groups. n a spring day in Chicago, if you long for NSF also funds fixed-target experiments and Othe crack of the bat and the scent of mustard special projects at Fermilab. The agency supports on hotdogs, head to Wrigley Field. In the seventh groups at KTeV and NuTeV, where experi- inning stretch you’ll sing a chorus of “Take Me menters hope to shed light on CP violation and Out to the Ball Game,” along with announcer neutrino-nucleon scattering, respectively. Two Harry Caray; baseball at Wrigley just wouldn’t be experiments related to charm quarks, E831 and the same without it. After the game, should you E835, are supported in part by NSF. This year, travel about 40 miles west to Fermilab, approximately 70 graduate students are receiv- you’d find another essential pair- ing their training in NSF-funded ing: Fermilab depends on research groups both at collider funding from the Depart- and fixed-target experi- ment of Energy, but ments. On a smaller scale, high-energy physics NSF grants to Fermilab here would be incom- augment research in plete without the cosmology and facili- support of the tate international National Science collaborations in Foundation, as well. particle physics with I nside NSF’s largest India and Korea. f contribution at In dollars, Fermilab is to the col- NSF’s contribution lider program. At to the national high- Wonyong Lee DZero, seven NSF-sup- energy physics program Profile ported groups built the is about 10 percent that 2 central drift chamber, the of DOE. -
01Ii Beam Line
STA N FO RD LIN EA R A C C ELERA TO R C EN TER Fall 2001, Vol. 31, No. 3 CONTENTS A PERIODICAL OF PARTICLE PHYSICS FALL 2001 VOL. 31, NUMBER 3 Guest Editor MICHAEL RIORDAN Editors RENE DONALDSON, BILL KIRK Contributing Editors GORDON FRASER JUDY JACKSON, AKIHIRO MAKI MICHAEL RIORDAN, PEDRO WALOSCHEK Editorial Advisory Board PATRICIA BURCHAT, DAVID BURKE LANCE DIXON, EDWARD HARTOUNI ABRAHAM SEIDEN, GEORGE SMOOT HERMAN WINICK Illustrations TERRY ANDERSON Distribution CRYSTAL TILGHMAN The Beam Line is published quarterly by the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Box 4349, Stanford, CA 94309. Telephone: (650) 926-2585. EMAIL: [email protected] FAX: (650) 926-4500 Issues of the Beam Line are accessible electroni- cally on the World Wide Web at http://www.slac. stanford.edu/pubs/beamline. SLAC is operated by Stanford University under contract with the U.S. Department of Energy. The opinions of the authors do not necessarily reflect the policies of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. Cover: The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory detects neutrinos from the sun. This interior view from beneath the detector shows the acrylic vessel containing 1000 tons of heavy water, surrounded by photomultiplier tubes. (Courtesy SNO Collaboration) Printed on recycled paper 2 FOREWORD 32 THE ENIGMATIC WORLD David O. Caldwell OF NEUTRINOS Trying to discern the patterns of neutrino masses and mixing. FEATURES Boris Kayser 42 THE K2K NEUTRINO 4 PAULI’S GHOST EXPERIMENT A seventy-year saga of the conception The world’s first long-baseline and discovery of neutrinos. neutrino experiment is beginning Michael Riordan to produce results. Koichiro Nishikawa & Jeffrey Wilkes 15 MINING SUNSHINE The first results from the Sudbury 50 WHATEVER HAPPENED Neutrino Observatory reveal TO HOT DARK MATTER? the “missing” solar neutrinos. -
Snowmass01 Masterreg DB 16May.FP5
SNOWMASS 2001 Summary: Working Groups Name Nametag Institution EMail M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6 T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 T8 T9 E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6 E7 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 ,1 Abe Toshinori Stanford Linear Accelerator Center [email protected] 1 ,2 Adams Todd Florida State University [email protected] 11 1 ,3 Adolphsen Chris Stanford Linear Accelerator Center [email protected] 11 ,4 Akerib Dan Case Western Reserve University [email protected] 11 ,5 Albright Carl H. Northern Illinois University [email protected] 11 ,6 Albrow Michael Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory [email protected] 11 11 ,7 Allen Matthew Stanford Linear Accelerator Center [email protected] 1 ,8 Appel Jeffrey Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory [email protected] 11 1 1 111 ,9 Artuso Marina Syracuse University [email protected] 1 ,10 Asiri Fred Stanford University [email protected] 1 ,11 Asztalos Steve Massachusetts Institute of Technology [email protected] 11 1 ,12 Atwood David Iowa State University [email protected] 11 13, Augustin Jean-Eude LPNHE Paris [email protected] 11 1 1 1 ,14 Avery Paul University of Florida [email protected] 11 1 1 ,15 Babukhadia Levan State University of New York, Stony [email protected] 1 1 111 ,16 Bachacou Henri Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [email protected] 111 1 ,17 Baer Howard Florida State University [email protected] 11 1 11 ,18 Baker Winslow Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory [email protected] 11 ,19 Balazs Csaba University of Hawaii [email protected] 111 ,20 Barber Desmond DESY, Hamburg [email protected] -
PHYSICS in COLLISION
Proceedings of the XXII International Conference on PHYSICS in COLLISION Edited by D. Su P. Burchat This document, and the material and data contained therein, was developed under spon- sorship of the United States Government. Neither the United States nor the Department of Energy, nor the Leland Stanford Junior University, nor their employees, nor their re- spective contractors, subcontractors, or their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any liability of responsibility for accuracy, completeness, or useful- ness of any information, apparatus, product or process disclosed, or represents that its use will not infringe privately owned rights. Mention of any product, its manufacturer, or suppliers shall not, nor is it intended to, imply approval, disapproval, or fitness of any particular use. A royalty-free, nonexclusive right to use and disseminate same for any purpose whatsoever, is expressly reserved to the United States and the University. Prepared for the Department of Energy under contract number DE-AC03-76SF00515 by Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford University, Stanford, California. Printed in the United States of America. Copies my be obtained by requesting SLAC-R-607 from the following address: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Technical Publications Department 2575 Sand Hill Road, MS-68 Menlo Park, CA 94025 E-mail address: [email protected] This document is also available online at http://www.slac.stanford.edu/econf/C020620/. D. Su and P. Burchat, Editors ISBN 0-9727344-0-6 ii INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE J. A. Appel Fermilab B. Aubert LAPP Annecy G. Barreira LIP Lisbon G. Bellini Milano University and INFN A. -
Energy Recovery Linacs As Synchrotron Light Sources Sol M. Gruner & Donald H. Bilderback (From the SLAC Beamline, Vol
Energy Recovery Linacs as Synchrotron Light Sources Sol M. Gruner & Donald H. Bilderback (From the SLAC Beamline, Vol. 32, Spring 2002. The full issue may be downloaded from www.slac.stanford.edu/pubs/beamline) A PERIODICAL OF PARTICLE PHYSICS SUMMER 2002 VOL. 32, NO. 1 Editor BILL KIRK Guest Editor HERMAN WINICK Contributing Editors JAMES GILLIES, page 6 JUDY JACKSON, AKIHIRO MAKI, MICHAEL RIORDAN, PEDRO WALOSCHEK Production Editor AMY RUTHERFORD Editorial Advisory Board PATRICIA BURCHAT, DAVID BURKE LANCE DIXON, EDWARD HARTOUNI ABRAHAM SEIDEN, GEORGE SMOOT ESRF HERMAN WINICK APS SPring8 Illustrations TERRY ANDERSON UHXS Distribution CRYSTAL TILGHMAN 700 m The Beam Line is published periodically by the page 14 Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025, Telephone: (650) 926- 2585. EMAIL: [email protected] FAX: (650) 926-4500 Issues of the Beam Line are accessible electroni- cally on the World Wide Web at http://www.slac. stanford.edu/pubs/beamline. SLAC is operated by Stanford University under contract with the U.S. Department of Energy. The opinions of the authors do not necessarily reflect the policies of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. Cover: Aerial photograph of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center and the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, one of several laboratories around the world working on the development of advanced X-ray light sources. See articles on pages 6 and 32. page 32 Printed on recycled paper CONTENTS 2 BEAM LINE EDITOR RENE DONALDSON RETIRES SPECIAL SECTION: ADVANCED LIGHT SOURCES 3 FOREWORD 22 ENERGY RECOVERY LINACS The prospect for powerful new sources AS SYNCHROTRON LIGHT of synchrotron radiation SOURCES Herman Winick Pushing to higher light source performance will eventually require FEATURES using linacs rather than storage rings, much like colliding-beam storage rings 6 INTERMEDIATE ENERGY are now giving way to linear colliders. -
APS News July 2018, Vol. 27. No. 7
July 2018 • Vol. 27, No. 7 A PUBLICATION OF THE AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY Homer Neal 1942-2018 Page 3 APS.ORG/APSNEWS Update on the APS Strategic Plan Throughout 2018, APS mem- bers, leadership, and staff have been preparing a new Strategic Plan to guide the Society in coming years (see APS News, February 2018). Archiving Knowledge about Physics Teaching MISSION VALUES VISION The process began in early 2018 at By Charles Henderson and Paula Heron the APS Leadership Convocation Do laboratory experiments help at the founding and develop- when elected leaders of mem- students learn concepts? Why do ment of Physical Review Physics bership units (Divisions, Topical so few women choose to major in Education Research in 2005, now Groups, Forums, and Sections) pro- physics? What is the most impor- a central and open-access home for vided input. Town hall meetings tant skill for a high school physics this work. and invited focus groups convened teacher to develop? The close connection between at the APS March and April meet- and Increasing Organizational Physics education researchers PER and physics as a discipline ings to gather direct member com- Excellence. tackle these and many other ques- was acknowledged by the American ment. CEO Kate Kirby provided an At its June retreat, the Board tions about why students study Physical Society Council in its update at the annual APS Business spent considerable time discuss- physics, what they learn, and 1999 Statement on Research in common teaching strategies and Meeting on April 13 and a member ing progress on the Plan. In guid- how their experiences affect their Physics Education [1]. -
Snowmass01 Masterreg DB.FP5
SNOWMASS 2001 Summary: Working Groups Name Nametag Institution EMail M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6 T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 T8 T9 E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6 E7 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 1 Abe, Toshinori Stanford Linear Accelerator Center [email protected] 1 2 Adams, Todd Florida State University [email protected] 11 1 3 Adolphsen, Chris Stanford Linear Accelerator Center [email protected] 11 4 Akerib, Dan Case Western Reserve University [email protected] 11 5 Albright, Carl H. Northern Illinois University [email protected] 11 6 Albrow, Michael Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory [email protected] 11 11 7 Albuquerque, Ivone Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [email protected] 11 8 Aldering, Greg Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [email protected] 11 9 Allen, Matthew Stanford Linear Accelerator Center [email protected] 1 10 Allen, Roland Texas A&M University [email protected] 111 11 Appel, Jeffrey Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory [email protected] 11 1 1111 12 Artuso, Marina Syracuse University [email protected] 1 13 Asiri, Fred Stanford University [email protected] 1 14 Asner, David Lawrence Livermore National Laboratoy [email protected] 11 1 11 15 Asztalos, Steve Massachusetts Institute of Technology [email protected] 11 1 16 Atwood, David Iowa State University [email protected] 11 17 Augustin, Jean-Eude LPNHE Paris [email protected] 11 1 1 1 18 Avery , Paul University of Florida [email protected] 11 1 1 19 Babukhadia, Levan State University of New York, Stony Brook [email protected] 1 1 111 20 Bachacou, Henri Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [email protected] 111 1 21 Baer, Howard Florida State University [email protected] 11 111 22 Bagger, Jonathan Johns Hopkins University [email protected] 11111 23 Baker, Winslow Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory [email protected] 11 24 Balantekin, A. -
2002-03 College Template
Volume XV College of Arts & Sciences Alumni Association Fall 2003 Letter from the chair Department proud of recent research, new faculty hanks for taking the time to learn James Glazier, a senior biophysicist who Institute of Health; and Robert de Ruyter more about some of the exciting joins us from Notre Dame; Mark Messier, van Steven, who joins us from Princeton. Tevents that have taken place in the an experimental high energy physicist from We will be highlighting the research IU Department of Physics over the last Harvard; and Rex Tayloe, who joined our activities of these four most recent additions year. What a fantastic time to be chair of nuclear group two years ago from Los to the faculty in our next newsletter. the IU physics department! I am blessed Alamos National Laboratory. We will also It is a privilege and honor to serve the IU with an energetic, enthusiastic faculty that be joined this fall by Sima Setayeshgar, a Department of Physics, and I am grateful is constantly developing new ways of biophysicist from Princeton; Jon Urheim, for your support. I look forward to the improving the learning environment for our an experimental high-energy physicist from opportunities ahead and wish each of you students and providing the thriving research the University of Minnesota; John Beggs, a every success in the year ahead. environment that is at the heart of our biophysicist joining us from the National — James Musser academic program. In this newsletter you’ll find articles about a number of important new elements of our research program, such Biocomplexity research experiences growth as our new low energy neutron scattering facility (LENS), which was approved for Since the beginning of a nascient variety of spatial and temporal struc- construction by the NSF this summer.