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TIME AND SPACE
Major upgrade to Fermilab accelerator complex gets green light
by Staff Writers
Chicago IL (SPX) Dec 17, 2020

illustration only

The U.S. Department of Energy has formally approved the scope, schedule and cost of the PIP-II project at DOE's Fermilab.

The approval, known as Critical Decision 2 or CD-2, is an endorsement of Fermilab's detailed, formal plan for building the PIP-II accelerator, a high-power, superconducting machine that will become the heart of the laboratory accelerator complex.

PIP-II, the only particle accelerator project in the United States with significant contributions from international partners, will send megawatt-scale proton beams - 60% higher than what Fermilab currently provides - to the lab's experiments.

The high beam power is especially important for the international Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment, hosted by Fermilab, where scientists will study difficult-to-detect subatomic particles called neutrinos, which could provide clues about the evolution of the universe. PIP-II's powerful beams will provide researchers with an abundance of these mysterious particles to study for decades to come.

The PIP-II team designed the program to be versatile, capable of providing customized proton beams to multiple experiments and thus serving a broad range of particle physics research.

"This major approval milestone is the culmination of years of hard work by a large group of excellent people across 11.5 time zones," said PIP-II Project Director Lia Merminga of Fermilab. "It is tremendously gratifying to see their efforts being recognized and thrilling to dream about all the great science PIP-II will enable."

The centerpiece of the PIP-II project is its superconducting linear accelerator. As the proton beam bolts down its 215-meter length, it picks up energy until it reaches 800 million electronvolts, about 84% of the speed of light. It then hands off the beam to the next accelerator in the lab's accelerator chain or to one of the lab's experiments.

"Fermilab and its partners are building a state-of-the-art machine with PIP-II that will ensure that the U.S. remains at the forefront of discovery in particle physics for decades to come," said Chris Fall, director of DOE's Office of Science. "By fostering international collaboration, we're realizing the value of global partnerships in science today and for future generations."

PIP-II institutional partners are contributing both components and expertise to the accelerator's construction. These include institutions in France, India, Italy, Poland and the United Kingdom.

"PIP-II is a truly global scientific undertaking that will usher in a new era of research and discovery in particle physics," said Fermilab Director Nigel Lockyer.

"Every member in the international collaboration played a part in creating the PIP-II plan, and their collective efforts are what made this CD-2 approval possible. I congratulate Lia Merminga and the absolutely superb PIP-II team on this achievement."

Video: How will Fermilab's new accelerator propel particles close to the speed of light?


Related Links
PIP-II accelerator
Understanding Time and Space


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TIME AND SPACE
Breakthrough in nuclear physics
Munich, Germany (SPX) Dec 10, 2020
The positively charged protons in atomic nuclei should actually repel each other, and yet even heavy nuclei with many protons and neutrons stick together. The so-called strong interaction is responsible for this. Prof. Laura Fabbietti and her research group at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have now developed a method to precisely measure the strong interaction utilizing particle collisions in the ALICE experiment at CERN in Geneva. The strong interaction is one of the four fundamental f ... read more

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