Kein Folientitel - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Kein Folientitel

Description:

First Meeting of the Steering Group GSI - Project. Report on the ... 90% Bund (federal); 10% Land (State of Hessen) A Brief History... GSI. Universit t Kassel ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:32
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: rei114
Category:
Tags: bund | folientitel | kein

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Kein Folientitel


1
First Meeting of the Steering Group GSI -
Project Report on the Status of the
Project Walter Henning / GSI Darmstadt, 02.
February 2004
2
GSI Darmstadt
Funding Support 90 Bund (federal) 10 Land
(State of Hessen)
Member of the Helmholtz Association
3
A Brief History...
Hessen
GSI
4
Worldwide Participation in Research at GSI
Germany
5
GSI an Overview
Budget 70 Mio (58 Mio operations, 12 Mio
investments)
Users about 1100 per year (200 GSI 900
external 500 national / 400 international)
SIS
UNILAC
ESR
Staff 850 (455 permanent) 250 scientists and
engineers
Facilities Accelerators (Unilac, SIS, ESR)
6
The Future International Facility at GSI
Beams of Ions and Antiprotons
Existing
Future Project
SIS 100/200
SIS
UNILAC
FRS
ESR
HESR
Super FRS
CR
NESR
100 m
7
The Future International Facility at GSI
Beams of Ions and Antiprotons
Existing
To be built
SIS 100/200
SIS
UNILAC
FRS
ESR
HESR
Beams now Z 1 92 (protons to uranium) up to
2 GeV/nucleon
Beams in the future 100 1000 fold intensity Z
-1 92 (protons to uranium plus anti-matter,
i.e. anti-protons) up to 35 - 45 GeV/nucleon
Super FRS
CR
NESR
100 m
8
Summary of Research Areas at the GSI Future
Facility
Structure and Dynamics of Nuclei - Radioactive
Beams Nucleonic matter Nuclear astrophysics Fundam
ental symmetries
Hadron Structure and Quark-Gluon Dynamics -
Antiprotons Non-pertubative QCD Quark-gluon
degrees of freedom Confinement and chiral symmetry
Nuclear Matter and the Quark-Gluon Plasma -
Relativistic HI - Beams Nuclear phase
diagram Compressed nuclear/strange
matter Deconfinement and chiral symmetry
Physics of Dense Plasmas and Bulk Matter - Bunch
Compression Properties of high density
plasmas Phase transitions and equation of
state Laser - ion interaction with and in plasmas
Ultra High EM-Fields and Applications - Ions
Petawatt Laser QED and critical fields Ion -
laser interaction Ion - matter interaction
9
Users, Costs and Schedules
10
Key Developments and Milestones
  • 1996-99 Discussion of Future Directions for the
    GSI Facilities
  • (Workshops and White Papers from 9 Working
    Groups, LoI Antiprotons)
  • 2000 Development of Facility Concept
  • 2001 Conceptual Design Report (700 pages, ca.
    500 authors worldwide)
  • 2001 Start of Critical RD - fast cycling
    superconducting magnets
  • - vacuum issues for high-current
    beams
  • - beam cooling
  • 2001-03 26 Workshops since Concept Development
  • 2002 Evaluation by the German Wissenschaftsrat
    Recommendation for Realization
  • 2002-03 Formation of Proto-Collaborations (PANDA
    / CBM / NUSTAR / FLAIR )
  • 2003 Decision by the Federal Government to
    Construct Facility
  • (2 conditions 25 of funding from international
    sources technical staging)

11
Pre-CDR Activities in Connection with the GSI
Plans
Letter of Intent "Construction of a GLUE/CHARM
Factory at GSI" Editorial Board B. Franzke
(GSI) P. Kienle (Munich) H. Koch
(Bochum) W. Kühn (Giessen) V. Metag
(Giessen) U. Wiedner (CERN Uppsala) Contribut
ions from W. Cassing (Giessen), S. Paul (Munich),
J. Pochodzalla (Heidelberg), M. Soyeur (Saclay)
and J. Wambach (Darmstadt) and many members of
the Hadron Working Group for GSI.
Working Groups on Long-Term Perspectives of
GSI Deep-inelastic electron-nucleon and
electron-nucleus scattering at ?s 20 30
GeVConveners V. Metag (GSI), D. v. Harrach
(Mainz),A. Schäfer (Frankfurt) X-ray
spectroscopy and radiation physicsConveners J.
Kluge (GSI), H. Backe (Mainz), G. Soff
(Dresden) Nuclear collisions at maximum baryon
densityConveners P. Braun-Munzinger (GSI), R.
Stock (Frankfurt),J. P. Blaizot
(Saclay) Physics with secondary beamsConveners
U. Lynen (GSI), D. Frekers (Münster),J. Wambach
(Darmstadt) Nuclear structure with radioactive
beamsConveners G. Münzenberg (GSI), D. Habs
(LMU München),H. Lenske (Gießen), P. Ring (TU
München) Plasma physics with heavy ion
beamsConveners R. Bock (GSI), D.H.H. Hoffmann
(Erlangen),J. Meyer-ter-Vehn (IPP
München) Accelerator studies (electron-nucleon/nu
cleus collider)Conveners K. Blasche (GSI), J.
Maidment (DESY),B. Autin (CERN), N. S. Dikansky
(Novosibirsk) Accelerator studies (high
intensity option)Convener D. Böhne (GSI) Short
Pulse/High Power LasersConvener J. Kluge (GSI)
23 Workshops on science and technical aspects of
the GSI future facility
12
Key Developments and Milestones
  • 1996-99 Discussion of Future Directions for the
    GSI Facilities
  • (Workshops and White Papers from 9 Working
    Groups, LoI Antiprotons)
  • 2000 Development of Facility Concept
  • 2001 Conceptual Design Report (700 pages, ca.
    500 authors worldwide)
  • 2001 Start of Critical RD - fast cycling
    superconducting magnets
  • - vacuum issues for high-current
    beams
  • - beam cooling
  • 2001-03 26 Workshops since Concept Development
  • 2002 Evaluation by the German Wissenschaftsrat
    Recommendation for Realization
  • 2002-03 Formation of Proto-Collaborations (PANDA
    / CBM / NUSTAR / FLAIR )
  • 2003 Decision by the Federal Government to
    Construct Facility
  • (2 conditions 25 of funding from international
    sources technical staging)

13
Contributors to the CDR
14
Key Developments and Milestones
  • 1996-99 Discussion of Future Directions for the
    GSI Facilities
  • (Workshops and White Papers from 9 Working
    Groups, LoI Antiprotons)
  • 2000 Development of Facility Concept
  • 2001 Conceptual Design Report (700 pages, ca.
    500 authors worldwide)
  • 2001 Start of Critical RD - fast cycling
    superconducting magnets
  • - vacuum issues for high-current
    beams
  • - beam cooling
  • 2001-03 26 Workshops since Concept Development
  • 2002 Evaluation by the German Wissenschaftsrat
    Recommendation for Realization
  • 2002-03 Formation of Proto-Collaborations (PANDA
    / CBM / NUSTAR / FLAIR )
  • 2003 Decision by the Federal Government to
    Construct Facility
  • (2 conditions 25 of funding from international
    sources technical staging)

15
Concept for Staged Construction of the
International Facility for Beams of Ions and
Antiprotons
16
Key Developments and Milestones
  • 1996-99 Discussion of Future Directions for the
    GSI Facilities
  • (Workshops and White Papers from 9 Working
    Groups, LoI Antiprotons)
  • 2000 Development of Facility Concept
  • 2001 Conceptual Design Report (700 pages, ca.
    500 authors worldwide)
  • 2001 Start of Critical RD - fast cycling
    superconducting magnets
  • - vacuum issues for high-current
    beams
  • - beam cooling
  • 2001-03 26 Workshops since Concept Development
  • 2002 Evaluation by the German Wissenschaftsrat
    Recommendation for Realization
  • 2002-03 Formation of Proto-Collaborations (PANDA
    / CBM / NUSTAR / FLAIR )
  • 2003 Decision by the Federal Government to
    Construct Facility
  • (2 conditions 25 of funding from international
    sources technical staging)

17
(No Transcript)
18
Letters of Intent (LoI's) for the International
Accelerator Facility for Ions and Antiprotons
  • the next steps
  • identification of experiment collaborations,
    i.e. authors, institutions and their intended
    involvement in the respective research
    programs/experiments
  • technical specification of programs/experiments
    (to the extent possible at this stage of the
    process) to assess the technical feasibility and
    space and infrastructure requirements.
  • evaluation of the scope of the proposed
    research, in order to establish that the
    anticipated activities fit within the overall
    envelope of total research time
  • the evaluation of the new programs/experiments
    proposed and not contained in the original CDR.
  • requirements, procedures, and schedules for the
    submission, review, and approval of technical
    reports (submission aimed for end of 2004).
  • the determination of the relevant advisory
    committee structure to accompany and monitor
    research proposals/experiments and their
    technical development and construction.
  • provisions for establishing a formal status of
    participation for individuals, or research groups
    and institutions, in case this is needed, for
    example, with the funding agencies in the
    respective home institutes and/or countries, etc.

19
Letters of Intent (LoI's) for the International
Accelerator Facility for Ions and
Antiprotonsproposed schedule
The administrative process of getting building
permits is a very subtle and time consuming one
and requests the early presentation of LoIs of
large-scale experiments with a strong influence
onto the final layout of the global geometrical
structure of the facility. Therefore we would
like to call on the communities of a)
Low Energy Anti Protons b) High Energy
Anti Protons c) High Energy Nuclear
Collisions to submit their letters of intent not
later than 15th of January, 2004. An expert
committee will evaluate the LoIs within the month
of February 2004. The communities of
a) Radioactive Beam Physics, b) Atomic
Physics c) Plasma Physics d)
Biophysics e) Material Research are
kindly requested to submit their LoIs until the
15th of April 2004. Their evaluation is foreseen
for the early May 2004.
20
(No Transcript)
21
(No Transcript)
22
Collaborations for Experiments at the
International Accelerator Facility at Darmstadt
Country/Institution
Austria Italy Russia
IMEP Austrian Academy of Science, Vienna Università de Piemonte Orientale, Alessandria JINR Dubna
China Università di Brescia JINR Dubna
IHEP Beijing Università di Catania BINP Novosibirsk
IMP Lanzhou INFN Sezione di Ferrara PNPI Gatchina, St. Petersburg
Germany LNF-INFN,  Frascati IHEP Protvino
Ruhr-Universität Bochum I3 Hadron Coordinator, Frascati Sweden
Universität Bonn Università di Genova Stockholm University
TU Dresden INFN Sezione di Genova TSL Uppsala
Universität Erlangen Università di Milano Uppsala Universitet
Universität Frankfurt Università di Pavia Switzerland
Universität Gießen Università di Torino Universität Basel
GSI, Darmstadt Università di Trieste INFN United Kingdom
FZ Jülich, IKP I Netherlands University Edinburgh
FZ Jülich, IKP II KVI Groningen University of Glasgow
Universität Mainz Poland U.S.A.
TU München University of Silesia, Catowice Northwestern University, Evanston
Universität Münster University Cracow
Universität Tübingen SINS Warschau
PANDA Experiment
23
Collaborations for Experiments at the
International Accelerator Facility at Darmstadt
CBM Experiment
Croatia Zagreb, Rudjer Bo.kovi. Institute Czech Republic Prag, Technical University Rez, Czech Academy of Sciences France Strasbourg, IN2P3-CNRS/ULP (IRes) Germany Darmstadt, GSI Frankfurt, Institut für Kernphysik, Universität Frankfurt Heidelberg, 2. Physikalisches Institut, Universität Heidelberg Heidelberg, Kirchhoff-Institut für Physik, Universität Heidelberg Münster, Institut für Kernphysik, Universität Münster Rossendorf, FZR, Institut für Kern- und Hadronenphysik Mannheim, Inst. of Computer Engineering, Universität Mannheim Marburg, Fachbereich Physik, Universität Marburg Hungary Budapest, Eötvös Univ. Budapest, KFKI Italy Frascati, INFN Korea Pusan, Pusan National University Seoul, Korea University Norway Bergen, Department of Physics, University of Bergen Portugal Coimbra, ISEC/LIP Poland Katowice, Silesia University Krakow, Jagiellonian University Warszawa, University, Nuclear Physics Division Romania Bucharest, Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering IPNE Russia Dubna, JINR-LHE Dubna, JINR-LPP Dubna, JINR-LIT Moscow, Institute for Nuclear Research Moscow, ITEP Moscow, SINP, Moscow State University Moscow, Kurchatov Institute Obninsk, Obninsk State University of Atomic Energy Protvino, IHEP St. Petersburg, Khlopin Radium Institute (KRI) St. Petersburg, CKBM St. Petersburg, PNPI Spain Santiago de la Compostela, University Ukraine Kiev, Shevshenko University Cyprus Cyprus University, Nikosia, Cyprus
24
Collaborations for Experiments at the
International Accelerator Facility at Darmstadt
NUSTAR Collaboration
Argentina TANDAR Australia Australien National University Belgium IPPE, KU Leuven, Louvain-la-Neuve, UL Bruxelles, Université Libre de Bruxelles Bulgary University of Sofia Canada TRIUMF Denmark University of Aarhus, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen Finland University of Jyväskyla France C.E.S.R., CEA Bruyeres-le-Chatel, CEA Saclay, CEN Bordeaux-Gradignan, CSNSM Orsay, DAPNIA/SPhN, CEA Saclay, GANIL, CNRS, IPN Orsay, IreS Strasbourg, LPC Caen, Orsay, University of Louvain Germany Bundesamt für Strahlenschutz, Berlin, FZ Jülich, FZ Karlsruhe, FZ Rossendorf, GSI, HMI Berlin, LMU München, MPI Heidelberg, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, TU Darmstadt, TU Dresden, TU München, Universität Bochum, Universität Bonn, Universität Erlangen, Universität Frankfurt, Universität Gießen, Universität Göttingen, Universität Heidelberg, Universität Köln, Universität Mainz, Universität Marburg, Universität München, Universität Münster, Universität Stuttgart, Universität Tübingen Greece INP, Demokritos Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Hungary ATOMKI, Debrecen India Nuclear Science Center, New Delhi, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre Israel The Weizmann Institute of Science Italy Dept. of Physics/INFN-LNS, INFN Legnaro, INFN Milano, INFN Padova, INFN Sezione di Pisa, LNS-Catania, Universita di Milano, Universita di Padova, Universita die Camerino and INFN-Sezione die Perugia, University "Frederico II", Napoli, Diparimento di Fisica "Galileo Galilei" INFN, University of Camerino, INFN Napoli Japan Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute, Konan University, Niigata University, Osaka University, RIKEN, Saitama University, Tokyo Institute of Technology, University of Tokyo Netherlands KVI Groningen Norway University of Oslo, Bergen University Poland Warsaw University, Jagellonian University, Niewodniczanski Institute of Nuclear Phyics, Institute of Nuclear Physics, Soltan Institute for Nuclear Studies Rumania Iinstitute of Physics, Bucharest, Institute for Physics of Nuclear Eng. Russia JINR Dubna, Kurchatov Institute, Institute of General and Nuclear Physics Scotland University of Glasgow, University of Edinburgh Slovakia Comenius University Bratislava Spain Univeri. Santiago di Compostela, CIEMAT, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Instituto de Estructura de la Materia, University of Sevilla, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, University of Huelva, CSIC Univ. Valencia Sweden Lund University, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm University, Chalmers University of Technology, Uppsala University Switzerland IFIn-HH/Cern, PSI, Universität Bern, Universität Basel, CERN, Inst. for Isotope Geology and Mineral Resources United Kingdom University of Paisley, University of Liverpool, CCLRC Daresbury, University of Surrey, University of Manchester USA ANL Argonne, Georgia College State University, LANL Los Alamos, NSCL/MSU, ORNL Oak Ridge, SUNY Stony Brook, Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory and NCSU, University of California, University of Connecticut, Yale University, University of Notre Dame Vietnam Institute of Physics
25
Collaborations for Experiments at the
International Accelerator Facility at Darmstadt
FLAIR Collaboration
AUSTRIA Institut für Mittelenergiephysik (IMEP), Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien Institute for Theoretical Physics, Vienna University of Technology CANADA Department of Physics and Astronomy, York University, Toronto, Canada DENMARK Institute for Storage Ring Facilities, Aarhus University Department for Physics and Astronomy, Aarhus University France Laboratoire Kastler-Brossel, École Normale Supérieure et Université P. et M. Curie, Paris GERMANY GSI Darmstadt Institut für Theoretische Physik, Technische Univ. Dresden Institut für Kernphysik, Universität Frankfurt Physikalisches Institut, Universität Freiburg Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik (MPQ), Garching Institut für Kernphysik, Universität Giessen II. Physikalisches Institut, Universität Giessen MPI für Kernphysik (MPI-K), Heidelberg Forschungszentrum Jülich Institut für Physik, Universität Mainz Physikalisches Institut, Universität Tübingen HUNGARY KFKI Research Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Budapest Institute of Nuclear Research of the Hungarian Academy, of Sciences (ATOMKI), Debrecen Department of Experimental Physics, University of Debrecen ITALY Dipartimento di Fisica, Università di Bologna and INFN, Sez. di Bologna Dipartimento di Fisica, Laboratorio LENS, INFN, Universita degli Studi di Firenze Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Genova Politecnico di Torino and INFN, Sez. di Torino Dipartimento di Fisica Sperimentale, Università di Torino and INFN, Sez. di Torino Dipartimento di Fisica Generale A. Avogadro", Università di Torino and INFN, Sez. di Torino CNR, Istituto di Cosmogeofisica and INFN, Sez. di Torino JAPAN Atomic Physics Laboratory, RIKEN, Wako Institute of Physics, University of Tokyo, and Atomic Physics Laboratory, RIKEN, Wako Department of Physics, University of Tokyo Institute of Physics, University of Tokyo NETHERLANDS Laser Centre Vrije Universiteit, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Amsterdam FOM Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics, Amsterdam POLAND Heavy Ion Laboratory, Warsaw University Soltan Institute for Nuclear Studies, Warsaw Institute of Theoretical Physics, Warsaw University RUSSIA Institute of Nuclear Physics, Moscow State University D.I. Mendeleev Institute for Metrology (VNIIM), St. Petersburg Department of Physics, St. Petersburg State University St. Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute SWEDEN Manne Siegbahn Laboratory (MSL), Stockholm Department of Atomic Physics, Stockholm University UNITED KINGDOM Department of Physics, University of Wales, Swansea USA Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts pbar medical, Los Alamos, New Mexiko University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico Department of Physics, Texas AM University, College Station, Texas
26
RD in Superconducting Magnet Technology
27
HESR Consortium for the construction of theHigh
Energy Storage Ring (HESR) for Antiprotons
- FZ-Jülich, Germany (Leader of Consortium) -
TSL, Uppsala, Sweden - MSL,Stockholm, Sweden -
BINP, Novosibirsk, Russia - GSI, Darmstadt,
Germany
28
Key Developments and Milestones
  • 1996-99 Discussion of Future Directions for the
    GSI Facilities
  • (Workshops and White Papers from 9 Working
    Groups, LoI Antiprotons)
  • 2000 Development of Facility Concept
  • 2001 Conceptual Design Report (700 pages, ca.
    500 authors worldwide)
  • 2001 Start of Critical RD - fast cycling
    superconducting magnets
  • - vacuum issues for high-current
    beams
  • - beam cooling
  • 2001-03 26 Workshops since Concept Development
  • 2002 Evaluation by the German Wissenschaftsrat
    Recommendation for Realization
  • 2002-03 Formation of Proto-Collaborations (PANDA
    / CBM / NUSTAR / FLAIR )
  • 2003 Decision by the Federal Government to
    Construct Facility
  • (2 conditions 25 of funding from international
    sources technical staging)

29
Construction-Related Administrative and
Legal Procedures, Processes and Permits...
  • Initiation of planning processes at various
    levels (local community, county district, state,
    forestry administration, federal,...)
  • Environmental impact assessment and statement
    under way
  • Energy assessment and impact statement under way
  • .......
  • Radiation safety concept planning and application
    made
  • approval and preliminary permit received
    in December 2003

30
Members of the EEIG (European Economical Interest
Grouping)
Council EEIG (Representatives of Institutions)
GSI Directorate DG Director
General ADF Associate Director for Finances and
Administration ADA Associate Director for
Accelerators ADI Associate Director for
Infrastructure ADR Associate Director for
Research ADFP Associate Director Future Project
France
GSI
Project Management
DG
Italy
Future Project
ADF ADA ADI ADR ADFP
UK
Research
Russia
Accelerator
INDIA
GSI Divisions
Infrastructure
FZ-Jülich
Administration
Sweden
Future Project

Demands of the Project towards GSI and external
partners
Resources, Finances, Manpower and Hardware
Contributions
31
External Advisory Committee (EAC) on GSI
Structure
Name Institute, Position
Prof. Dr. Daniel Guerreau IN2P3/CNRS, Scientific Deputy Director
Prof. Dr. Muhsin Harakeh KVI Groningen, Director
Dr. Norbert R. Holtkamp Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Director Accelerator Systems
Prof. Dr. Eberhard Jaeschke BESSY Berlin, Techn. Director
Prof. Dr. Jan Jolie Universität, Director Institut für Kernphysik
Prof. Dr. Robert Klanner DESY Hamburg, Research Director
Prof. Dr. Hans Joachim Langmann Merck KGaA Darmstadt, Member of the Executive Board
Dr. Christopher Leemann Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, Director
Ass.jur. Sigurd Lettow Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Director Infrastructure
Prof. Dr. Yves Petroff Ministère de la Recherche, Direction de la Recherche
Dr. Wolf-Dieter Schlatter CERN, Leader EP Division
Prof. Dr. Dirk Schwalm MPI für Kernphysik, Director
32
Existing Preliminary Working Groups and Advisory
Committees...
  • External Technical Advisory Committee (ETAC)
  • External Scientific Advisory Committee (ESAC)
  • External Magnet Advisory Committe (EMAC)
  • External Advisory Committee on Project Structure
    (EAC-PS)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com