P5 and the HEP Program A. Seiden Fermilab June 2, 2003.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
11/29/01YPP Town Meeting The report indicates diversity may need to be sacrificed for the sake of Linear Collider construction/operation. How do you feel.
Advertisements

ILCSC Report KILC12 / Daegu Jonathan Bagger Chair, ILCSC Johns Hopkins University 4/23/12.
Position of the Czech Republic on the European Strategy in Particle Physics Current main activities in particle physics * Plans for the future Recommendations.
European Strategy for Particle Physics 2013 Preparatory group->Strategy group Individual town meetings Town meeting in Krakow: september 2012 Drafting.
DOE Neutrino Program Plans
Beyond the ALCPG David B. MacFarlane Associate Laboratory Director for PPA.
HEPAP SUBPANEL Synopsis of the Long Range Plan for U.S. High Energy Physics Jon Bagger / Barry Barish Presentation to HEPAP October 29, 2001.
Department of Energy Office of Science Report from DOE Office of High Energy Physics Report from DOE Office of High Energy Physics Dr. Robin Staffin Associate.
Department of Energy Office of Science Yet Another Report from DOE Office of High Energy Physics Presented to SLUO September 10, 2006 Dr. Robin.
F Future of Neutrino Program at FNAL NuMI Off-Axis Meeting Hugh Montgomery January 12, 2004.
This is the last message in this gathering of North American PI’s with an interest in the INFN hosted SuperB project. I will try to deal with issues on.
Office of Fusion Energy Sciences (OFES) Perspective Gene Nardella, Acting Associate Director of Science for Fusion Energy Sciences
NFAC Neutrino Facilities Assessment Committee Barry Barish Chair 19-Sept-02 for National Research Council.
Office of Science U.S. Department of Energy U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science Dr. Raymond L. Orbach Under Secretary for Science U.S. Department.
Interdisciplinary and Interagency Cooperation in High Energy Physics Barry Barish BPA 5-Nov-02.
View from the NSF: Later Years J. Whitmore (EPP-PNA) M. Pripstein (LHC) M. Goldberg, J. Reidy (EPP) LEPP – CLEO CESR Symposium at Cornell, May 31, 2008.
Output from this Series of Workshops: A science vision for the RHIC future 1.Provide a science case for the future RHIC program that makes clear its importance.
International collaboration in high energy physics experiments  All large high energy physics experiments today are strongly international.  A necessary.
Jefferson Lab Status Hall A collaboration Dec. 16, 2013 R. D. McKeown Deputy Director For Science.
GlueX Collaboration Meeting February 2011 Jefferson Lab Our 30’th Collaboration Meeting.
Challenges For Realizing the ILC The View from HEPAP Fred Gilman Snowmass 2005 August 23, 2005.
HEPAP and P5 Report DIET Federation Roundtable JSPS, Washington, DC; April 29, 2015 Andrew J. Lankford HEPAP Chair University of California, Irvine.
ECFA European Committee for Future Accelerators ECFA ACTIVITIES Lenny Rivkin, EPFL & PSI CHIPP Plenary meeting Fribourg, 30 June – 2 July, 2014.
Long Range Planning Pier Oddone September 24, 2007.
Physics Priorities S. Dawson July 11, 2007 Fermilab Steering Committee Meeting.
P5 and the Particle Physics Roadmap A. Seiden UC Santa Cruz Chair of P5.
C. H. Shepherd-Themistocleous - RALIoP HEPP Conference, UCL 29 th March Particle Physics Advisory Panel C. H. Shepherd-Themistocleous Rutherford.
Office of Science U.S. Department of Energy RHIC Users Meeting BNL; June 8, 2006 Gulshan Rai RHIC/AGS Users Meeting Gulshan Rai Program Manager for Heavy.
F Fermilab: The Future Fermilab Users Meeting Hugh Montgomery June 3, 2003.
GOVERNOR’S EARLY CHILDHOOD ADVISORY COUNCIL (ECAC) September 9, 2014.
U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science High Energy Physics Advisory Panel Meeting FY 2009 Budget Request.
NSAC Report Donald Geesaman Argonne National Laboratory Chair, US Department of Energy/National Science Foundation Nuclear Science Advisory Committee NuPECC.
NSAC Report Donald Geesaman Argonne National Laboratory Chair, US Department of Energy/National Science Foundation Nuclear Science Advisory Committee NuPECC.
All Hands Meeting FY 2008 Budget Pier Oddone Fermilab December 20, 2007.
Collider Detector at Fermilab Sung-hyun chang High Energy Physics lab. KNU.
Office of Science U.S. Department of Energy Raymond L. Orbach Director Office of Science U.S. Department of Energy Presentation to BESAC December 6, 2004.
Jefferson Lab Update R. D. McKeown Jefferson Lab HPS Meeting June 16, 2014.
11 DOE Office of Science High Energy Physics Program AAAC Meeting October 15, 2009 National Science Foundation Dennis Kovar Associate Director of the Office.
Report from ILCSC Shin-ichi Kurokawa KEK ILCSC Chair GDE meeting at Frascati December 7, 2005.
US LHC Accelerator Research Program Jim Strait For the BNL-FNAL-LBNL LHC Accelerator Collaboration DOE Meeting 18 April 2003 brookhaven - fermilab - berkeley.
Accelerators in our Future ILC and Beyond Barry Barish Caltech Neutrino Telescope - Venice 13-March-09.
Pathways to Explore Neutrino Physics Fred Gilman NuFact03 New York June 5, 2003.
Status Report on ILC Project in Japan Seiichi SHIMASAKI Director, Office for Particle and Nuclear Research Promotion June 19, 2015.
Summary Comments and Discussion Pier Oddone 40 th Anniversary Users’ Meeting June 8, 2007.
Welcome and Presentation of Charge Steve Holmes Accelerator Advisory Committee ( May 10-12, 2005.
Status and plans for role of Japan in HL-LHC Katsuo Tokushuku Institute of Particle Nuclear Studies (IPNS) High Energy Accelerator Research Organization.
Searching for New Matter with the D0 Experiment Todd Adams Department of Physics Florida State University September 19, 2004.
Future Direction of the U.S. Fusion Materials Program Dr. Pete Pappano US Department of Energy Fusion Energy Sciences Fusion Power Associates Annual Meeting.
Department of Energy Office of Science  FY 2007 Request for Office of Science is 14% above FY 2006 Appropriation  FY 2007 Request for HEP is 8% above.
FY’06 Budget Implications for Fermilab and MINER A From presentations by Steve Holmes and Mike Witherell.
News Y2K June 25, Summary of June 12 Face-to-Face Meeting.
1 Future Circular Collider Study Preparatory Collaboration Board Meeting September 2014 R-D Heuer Global Future Circular Collider (FCC) Study Goals and.
John Womersley 1/13 Fermilab’s Future John Womersley Fermilab May 2004.
Budget Outlook Glen Crawford P5 Meeting Sep
P5 Report: The Particle Physics Roadmap 1 A. Seiden Fermilab May 14, 2007.
Hitoshi Yamamoto, 2-Oct Detector Tohoku Forum for Creativity - a Pilot Program - ‘Particle Physics and Cosmology after the Discovery of the Higgs.
Perspective on the Future of HEP By Jonathan Dorfan, SLAC Director Snowmass 2001 Sunday, July 1, 2001.
Philip Burrows HEP Forum, Coseners House, 6/05/06 Elementary Particle Physics in the 21 st Century Philip Burrows John Adams Institute Oxford University.
Steering Group Meeting 10:30 – 12:30 am CDT Monday, July 23, 2007 Y2K.
PPAN perspective and the Science Roadmap Jordan Nash PPAN Chair.
Muon Collaboration Meeting Steve Geer MUTAC Review, Jan, 2003 Muon Collaboration WELCOME.
Nigel Lockyer Fermilab Operations Review 16 th -18 th May 2016 Fermilab in the Context of the DOE Mission.
Intensity Frontier Physics with a Mega-Watt Proton Source R. Tschirhart Fermilab Science & Technology Review November
CPM 2012, Fermilab D. MacFarlane & N. Holtkamp The Snowmass process and SLAC plans for HEP.
FNAL SCRF Review R. Kephart. What is this Review? FNAL has argued that SCRF technology is an “enabling” accelerator technology (much like superconducting.
Charge for APS Neutrino Study
Yet Another Report from DOE Office of High Energy Physics
Snowmass on the Mississippi
Particle Physics Theory
Feedback from the Temple Town Meeting MEIC Accelerator R&D Meeting
Presentation transcript:

P5 and the HEP Program A. Seiden Fermilab June 2, 2003

2 The P5 Subpanel of HEPAP was formed based on the November 6, 2002 letter to HEPAP from the DOE and the National Science Foundation. The P5 committee membership was chosen soon after. Our first report will be in response to the January 21, 2003 letter to P5 and is due around the time of the next HEPAP meeting at the end of July, 2003.

3 A major task of P5 is to translate the scientific vision of the field into a facilities roadmap, which will provide the agencies and the scientific community with a twenty year plan of potential world class science projects. The roadmap includes approximate time windows needed for the R&D, construction, and facility utilization in order to reap the scientific benefits of each project. The roadmap is maintained on a public web site at

4

5 Along with members of HEPAP, our first task was to participate on a facilities committee, chaired by Fred Gilman. This resulted in the report: High-Energy Physics Facilities Recommended for the DOE Office of Science Twenty-Year Roadmap. This was part of a broad Office of Science planning exercise. I anticipate that we will find out more about the Office of Science plan later this year.

6 HEP Facilities Summary Table

7 To be considered absolutely central, we require that the intrinsic potential of the science be such as to change our view of the universe. This is an extremely high standard, at the level at which Nobel Prizes are awarded. Our standard for facilities that we judge to be important is that they be world class. Moreover, a set of experiments that are individually important can together change our view of the universe. This has happened repeatedly in the past and we expect that it will be the case with the future facilities we are considering. For example, a diverse set of quark physics experiments carried out over several decades have together led to a picture in which just a few fundamental parameters explain all the weak interactions of quarks and matter-antimatter asymmetries seen in the laboratory up to now. These experiments led to absolutely central science.

8 The highest priority for the U.S. program has clearly been indicated by the Long-Range Planning Subpanel based on the expectation that the Linear Collider will be the next major step forward in exploring physics at the energy frontier. Along with the LHC it will provide a sweeping view and incredible precision, with the discoveries of each accelerator used to great advantage in extracting and extending the physics results of the other. The Long-Range Planning Subpanel therefore recommended, as its highest priority, that the U.S. participate in such a project, wherever it is located in the world, and that the U.S. prepare to bid to host the facility.

9 Since this recommendation was made, several suggestions contained in the subpanel report have moved ahead. This includes the formation of a U.S. steering group and a process for a technology selection, which is expected in the coming year. A clear plan for the required remaining R&D is being fleshed out.

10 In the intermediate term the roadmap includes projects either in construction or that could soon be in construction and that would provide an exciting physics program later in this decade. It is important that we develop a plan for this time period which will provide the best science within budget limitations. P5 will try to work with the agencies on defining such a program.

11 As an example, such a program might include, by physics theme: 1)The LHC, which will be the energy frontier program, with potential impact on all major goals of the field. 2) BTeV, potentially the best quark flavor physics experiment into the next decade. 3) SNAP, which could map the dark energy content of the universe as it evolved. Along with GLAST, Ice- Cube, and dark matter searches it would provide new capabilities for studies of the cosmos. 4) The Numi-Minos program, the first high statistics accelerator based neutrino experiment able to carefully measure neutrino oscillations. There are also likely to be additional opportunities in the area of neutrino physics, based on the discoveries of the last few years.

12 Such a program would be diverse, addresses the primary physics goals of the field, and has important connections to other fields. We need help from the community in defining such a program and broadly conveying the importance of the science.

13 The roadmap includes projects that have already received endorsement from the appropriate peer-review advisory body and are ready to move into construction phase. Based on an explicit request for prioritization from the agencies for a number of such projects in the $50M to $600M range, P5 is charged with providing an evaluation of the relative merits among these projects. This includes a broad evaluation of costs, schedule, and scientific potential. The first P5 report will include an evaluation of three projects ready for construction at Fermilab: 1. The CDF and D0 detector upgrades for Run IIB of the Tevatron Collider, 2. The BTeV experiment that would carry out very high sensitivity studies of the decays of B hadrons, and 3. The CKM experiment, which has as its primary goal the study of the very rare decay K + →π + vv.

14 P5 conducted its review of these projects at a two day meeting at Fermilab on March 26 and 27, The meeting included presentations from the projects and the laboratory as well as follow-up questions and committee discussion. The meeting was preceded by examination of a large number of documents that record the history of previous reviews of the projects. The proponents also were requested to answer a number of questions. We are now waiting for Fermilab to complete its review and plans for the Tevatron. P5 will finish its report at a meeting on July 17 and 18.