REGISTER   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   E-MAIL ALERTS   |   HELP |   SIGN OUT    

Home   |   Print edition   |   Advertising  |   Buyers Guide   |   Jobs   |   Events calendar   |   RSS feeds
  • Table of contents
  • Past issues

yellow star Featured Jobs

  • Search jobs
  • Post jobs
Letters

Accelerator Test Facility Hosts User-Oriented Research

Maury Tigner strikes a chord with accelerator scientists in his outstanding description of the science, technology, and culture of particle accelerator R&D (Physics Today, January 2001, page 36).

Tigner refers to his recommendation in the report of the high-energy physics advisory panel's subpanel on accelerator research and development to devote intellectual and monetary resources to high-energy accelerator R&D. That report was instrumental in establishing, in 1982, the Advanced Accelerator Concepts R&D Program in the Department of Energy, Office of High Energy Physics. The program has, for several years, been supporting university, industrial, and national laboratory R&D projects on advanced accelerators. For the past decade, DOE funded, among other things, the Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (see http://www.atf.bnl.gov).

The ATF hosts exactly the user-oriented research that Tigner praises in the article section "Hope for the future." Fifteen graduate students have done their thesis research at the ATF since 1992, and the facility currently has 11 university users and 2 small business users. Another indication of the ATF's importance is the number of times it appears in the pages of high-impact journals such as Physical Review, Physical Review Special Topics—Accelerators and Beams, and Science. ATF users come from all parts of the US and from Russia, Japan, and Taiwan. The research covers advanced accelerator subjects, light-source science, diagnostics, lasers, and high-brightness electron sources. For nearly a decade, the facility has been a leader in accelerator-based particle and light-source research. I would like to think that the Orion project at SLAC, due to come on line in a few years, was inspired at least in part by the ATF.

Ilan Ben-Zvi
(ilan@bnl.gov)
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Upton, New York

 

  • Article Tools
  • Enlarge text   Enlarge text
  • Shrink text   Shrink text
  • Printer-friendly formatPrinter-friendly format
  • Download PDFDownload PDF
  • E-mail this articleE-mail this article
  • Comment on this articleWrite a letter to the editor
  • Related from the archive
  • Does Accelerator-Based Particle Physics Have a Future?
  • Free this month
  • The Nobel Laureate Versus the Graduate Student
  • Cosmic Microwave Observations Yield More Evidence of Primordial Inflation
  • Scrounging Old Equipment for New Experiments
  • Nations Tackle Nuclear Terrorist Threat
  • Letters
  • Most popular articles
  • Month-long calculation resolves an 82-year-old quantum paradox
    September 2009
  • Friction, force chains, and falling fruit
    September 2009
  • US electricity grid still vulnerable to electromagnetic pulses
    September 2009
  • A ghost image violates a Bell inequality
    August 2009
  • Request product info

     

     


    SERVICES
    Physics Today Jobs
    Physics Today Buyers Guide
    Research Today
    NEWS
    News Picks
    We Hear That Society News
    Event Calendar
    Obituaries
    THE MAGAZINE
    This month in print
    Past Issues
    Institutional subscriptions
    Information for advertsers
    READER SERVICE
    Register
    Sign in
    Subscribe
    Email alert
    MORE INFO
    Contact us
    About Physics Today
    Privacy Policy
    Terms & Conditions
    Copyright © 2009 by the American Institute of Physics - All rights reserved