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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES Peter Bond Deputy Director for Science and Technology October 29, 2005 New Frontiers at RHIC Workshop
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 2 RHIC and BNL In case there is any doubt – RHIC’s science and the facility are crucial to BNL Its future evolution is also very important QCDLab is an elegant, exciting concept that also excites DOE What do we need to do to make it real ?
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 3 Making QCDLab real First step is meetings like this one – experts make a convincing science case to themselves BUT Keep in mind the arguments for other audiences General NP community DOE, OMB, and Congress Each audience requires less detail, but a compelling reason and each audience is vital to success
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 4 What is the Lab Priority ? Lab presented a “Business Plan” to DOE in May There were four initiatives, two of them major NSLS II QCDLab Staggered starts - NSLS first – why ?
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 5 Scope: Evolve the RHIC complex to further the study of QCD experimentally and theoretically Luminosity, polarization, and experimental equipment upgrades Electron ring and associated new e+A/e+p detector High-end computing capability for next-generation lattice QCD simulations Expectation: RHIC, eRHIC, and QCDOC as a “QCD Lab” will play a major role in determining: The nature of the quark-gluon plasma and the visible universe The origin of the spin of the proton The role of the color glass condensate in the structure and interaction of high energy hadrons Benefit to DOE and Taxpayer : “The discovery and characterization of this new state of matter formed at extreme conditions never before available in the laboratory will yield new insight into the early phases of the universe.” (from DOE Strategic Plan) Taxpayers’ intellectual curiosity about the origin and structure of the universe Train next generation of scientists Competition: LHC for heavy ions Major Initiative: RHIC “QCD Lab”
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 6 RHIC “QCD Lab” Construction cost and schedule: Luminosity and detector upgrade; electron ring & new detector Costs ~$500-680M; Schedule ~FY 09-15 Core competencies: Extraordinary facilities Tera (peta)-scale computing Advanced concepts Revenue, manpower, and space: Planned R&D, AIP, capital equipment for accelerators and detectors for next five years: $18M/yr (in FY 05$) Laboratory discretionary investment No additional manpower and space needed in next five years
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 7 RHIC “QCD Lab” Develop AGS-based program Catastrophic: loss of 1/3 of BNL’s revenue, international leadership in Nuclear Physics, intellectual vitality, large user base Renege on international and interagency commitments Communicate the value of the program Retain operating funding for RHIC Concentrate on running RHIC Much more difficult to get support Convince the community Nuclear Physics Long Range Plan process Concentrate on stochastic cooling Lower ultimate luminosity for RHIC and eRHIC Fund R&D Technical - i.e., electron cooling, ERL Plan B Consequences of Lack of Success StrategyHurdles
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 8 What are the hurdles to be overcome ? The technical and science hurdles are the “easy” ones Competition LHC for science TJLAB (12 GeV), RIA, other DOE offices for funding TJLAB for QCDLab Cost
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BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES 9 Summary RHIC has been a great success and has an exciting future QCDLab is a compelling vision, but will require much collaborative work between the community and the Lab to make it real Meetings like today set the vital science foundation – lab has been using and will use its resources (not just money) to help move it up the chain
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