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John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science

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Presentation on theme: "John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science"— Presentation transcript:

1 John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science
Training Provision and Market Needs for Trained Personnel in Accelerator Science in Europe Philip Burrows John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science Oxford University 1

2 Survey of accelerator training
2

3 TIARA WP5: Education & Training
WP5.1 Make a survey of the number of students, courses and teaching resources in Accelerator Science and establish a common resources database WP5.2 Evaluate and develop the “market” for trained Accelerator Scientists (physicists, engineers, technicians) for research, healthcare, industry and public service WP5.3 Determine a plan of action for promoting Accelerator Science and Technology within schools, universities, research organisations, industry and society 3

4 TIARA WP5 participants 1 CEA: Phu-anh Phi Nghiem, Francois Kircher
CERN: Roger Bailey (CAS), Kate Kahle/ Agnes Szeberenyi (EUCARD), Louis Rinolfi (JUAS) 3 CNRS: Alex Muller, Catherine Clerc CIEMAT: Marisa Marco, Diego Obrador, Susanna Falcon 6 GSI: Oliver Boine-Frankenheim, Sabrina Appel 7 INFN: Vittorio Vaccaro, Francesca Galluccio 8 PSI: Lenny Rivkin 9 STFC: Philip Burrows, Max Bradbury 10 Nordic group: Soren Pape Moeller + Ole Petter Nordahl IFJ: Piotr Malecki 4

5 Survey of accelerator training
5

6 Training survey topics
Institutes providing training Personnel involved in delivering training Type of training Numbers and types of students Training materials and facilities Career destinations 6

7 www-based survey www-based questionnaire Thanks to Max Bradbury 7
Thanks to Max Bradbury 7

8 Survey responses Survey launched 6/9/11
By April 2012 responses from 88 institutes across Europe This is a fantastic response: thanks to all who completed the survey! We have captured the vast majority of the key players 8

9 Responding institutes by country
Denmark 1 Finland 1 France 18 Germany 11 Greece 3 Italy Netherlands 1 Norway 1 Poland 5 Spain Sweden 4 Switzerland 4 UK 9

10 Survey report Report available from 10

11 Survey highlights: institutes
88 responding institutes 3060 personnel engaged in accelerator science 75 institutes (85%) provide training themselves 12 institutes plan/desire to train in future 11

12 Survey highlights: trainees
1371 people (2011) currently receive training: 34% undergraduates 26% masters 14% PhD 7% postdocs 17% staff 12

13 Survey highlights: trainees
13

14 Survey highlights: trainees
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15 Trainees / population 15

16 Formal training hours 55 / 75 institutes reported ‘formal’ training hours 16

17 Trainees vs formal training hours
17

18 Integrated training hours
62777 formal training hours provided (2011) 18

19 Integrated training hours
19

20 % of formal training on accel sci
20

21 Training subjects 72 institutes reported on training subjects 21

22 Accelerator school attendance
83 institutes send people to accelerator schools: 339 people (2011) 22

23 Training materials 23

24 Use of facilities for training
59 institutes reported using 51 facilities 24

25 Career destinations 25

26 Training survey conclusions
A surprisingly large amount of training is being provided: 26

27 Training survey conclusions
A surprisingly large amount of training is being provided: 75 institutes, 1371 people (2011), 62777 formal training hours provided (2011) 27

28 Training survey conclusions
A surprisingly large amount of training is being provided: 75 institutes, 1371 people (2011), 62777 formal training hours provided (2011) However, for students, accelerator science is typically a small part of overall training, << 50 hours per trainee 28

29 Training survey conclusions
A surprisingly large amount of training is being provided: 75 institutes, 1371 people (2011), 62777 formal training hours provided (2011) However, for students, accelerator science is typically a small part of overall training, << 50 hours per trainee 11 institutes provide > 100 hours to Master’s stud 29

30 Training survey conclusions
A surprisingly large amount of training is being provided: 75 institutes, 1371 people (2011), 62777 formal training hours provided (2011) However, for students, accelerator science is typically a small part of overall training, << 50 hours per trainee 11 institutes provide > 100 hours to Master’s stud 83 institutes send people to accelerator schools: 339 people (2011) 30

31 Training survey conclusions
A surprisingly large amount of training is being provided: 75 institutes, 1371 people (2011), 62777 formal training hours provided (2011) However, for students, accelerator science is typically a small part of overall training, << 50 hours per trainee 11 institutes provide > 100 hours to Master’s stud 83 institutes send people to accelerator schools: 339 people (2011) At each stage, about 1/3 of trainees go to industry 31

32 www-based database front end
allow charts, tables, histograms generated by user 32 Max Bradbury

33 Survey of ‘market’ for personnel
33

34 Markets surveyed Major laboratories: CERN, DESY, GSI, INFN, STFC, CEA, CNRS, CIEMAT … Universities Large projects/facilities: XFEL, FAIR, ESS, MaxIV, SuperB, IFMIF … Companies Medical facilities: X-ray and hadron therapy, isotope production … 34

35 Issues investigated How many accelerator personnel required? Time profiling? Of what type? physicist, engineer, technician … At what qualification level? PhD, master’s, bachelor’s … Dedicated training of staff required? Issues of recruitment/access? Areas of key skills shortages? 35

36 Survey spreadsheet

37 Responses 70 research institutes accelerator-related personnel 3638
44 companies accelerator-related personnel 993 ‘patchy’ response company data ‘anonymised’ nevertheless some conclusions can be drawn X-ray and hadron therapy facilities 37

38 Accelerator personnel
38

39 ‘Needs for accelerator scientists’ report
39

40 Accelerator personnel: institutes
40

41 Accelerator personnel: institutes
41

42 Accelerator personnel: companies
42

43 Recruitment: institutes
43

44 Recruitment: companies
44

45 Recruitment difficulty: institutes
45

46 Recruitment difficulty: companies
46

47 Skills shortages: institutes
47

48 Skills shortages: companies
48

49 Personnel training: institutes
49

50 Personnel training: companies
50

51 Medical facilities Europe:
5000 physicists and engineers working in ‘medical physics’ (EFOMP) > 200 PET cyclotrons in EU UK: 700 physicists in 54 radiotherapy depts. Vast majority of systems are turn-key  Not obvious how many accelerator personnel 51

52 Medical facilities Europe:
5000 physicists and engineers working in ‘medical physics’ (EFOMP) > 200 PET cyclotrons in EU UK: 700 physicists in 54 radiotherapy depts. Vast majority of systems are turn-key  Not obvious how many accelerator personnel Hadron therapy in Europe (PTCOG): 12 operating centres: accel. staff each +9 in construction, +2 UK  Doubling of trained personnel within 5-10 years 52

53 Market survey conclusions
Projected growth in personnel 18-20% in 5 years: Germany (+24%), Italy (+55%), Nordic (+68%); largely engineers and technicians 53

54 Market survey conclusions
Projected growth in personnel 18-20% in 5 years: Germany (+24%), Italy (+55%), Nordic (+68%); largely engineers and technicians Annual recruitment of personnel: institutes 9%, companies 18% 54

55 Market survey conclusions
Projected growth in personnel 18-20% in 5 years: Germany (+24%), Italy (+55%), Nordic (+68%); largely engineers and technicians Annual recruitment of personnel: institutes 9%, companies 18% Difficulties in recruiting trained personnel, especially engineers (70%) 55

56 Market survey conclusions
Projected growth in personnel 18-20% in 5 years: Germany (+24%), Italy (+55%), Nordic (+68%); largely engineers and technicians Annual recruitment of personnel: institutes 9%, companies 18% Difficulties in recruiting trained personnel, especially engineers (70%) Skills shortages: RF, vacuum, beam dynamics, instrumentation + controls, magnets … 56

57 Market survey conclusions
Projected growth in personnel 18-20% in 5 years: Germany (+24%), Italy (+55%), Nordic (+68%); largely engineers and technicians Annual recruitment of personnel: institutes 9%, companies 18% Difficulties in recruiting trained personnel, especially engineers (70%) Skills shortages: RF, vacuum, beam dynamics, instrumentation + controls … Training: 94% institutes, 75% of companies; significant need (c. 60%) for external training 57

58 Recommendations Improving supply of trained personnel
Improving access to opportunities for personnel Improving external access to trained personnel Promoting accelerator science in society 58

59 Final report


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