Title: Brookhaven Lab: A Regional Science
1Brookhaven Lab A RegionalScience Technology
Leader
Praveen Chaudhari Director Brookhaven National
Laboratory December 14, 2004
2About Brookhaven Lab
- Founded in 1947 by Associated Universities Inc.
- Operated by Brookhaven Science Associates since
March 1, 1998 - Battelle, Columbia, Cornell, Harvard, MIT,
Princeton, Stony Brook, Yale - Current staff of approximately 2,700 (600
scientists) - More than 4,000 facility users annually
- FY04 budget 445 million, 398 million from DOE
- NIH NASA NRC DoD DHS - 45 million
3Brookhavens Mission
- Undertake high-risk, long lead time research in
key DOE science technology mission areas - Physical Sciences, Life Sciences, Technology
- Conduct accelerator, detector, and
instrumentation research and support the nations
science and technology enterprise - Provide facility users with the most powerful
tools available for scientific and technical work - Partner with industry to ensure the U.S. lead in
science and technology - Provide educational opportunities for the future
generation of U.S. scientists and the community - Transfer innovation and technology to the market
4Brookhaven Accomplishments
- Home to six Nobel Prizes -- five in physics and
one in chemistry - Development of technetium-99m, used to diagnose
heart disease, other ailments in 11 million
Americans each year. - Development of L-dopa for the treatment of
Parkinsons disease - First chemical synthesis of human insulin
- Development of thallium-201, used in heart stress
tests - Development of the T7 gene expression system,
used worldwide to produce proteins for research
and industry - Invention of the worlds first video game in 1958
5Brookhavens Major Facilities
RHIC
BLIP and BAF
AGS Complex
Materials Science
Isotope Production
PET
MRI
Chemistry LEAF
Instrumentation
Tandem
Physics
Computing
National SynchrotronLight Source
Medical Research
Biology
STEM CDIC
6Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
- Worlds newest and biggest particle accelerator
for nuclear physics research - 1,042 users from 144 institutions
- Collides heavy gold ions at nearly the speed of
light - Evidence for quark-gluon plasma, colored glass
condensate found, more experiments to confirm
7Other Physics Initiatives
- Muon g-2 Testing the Standard Model
- Dark Matter/Dark Energy Large Synoptic Survey
Telescope - Rare Symmetry Violating Processes - Funded in
FY05 -
Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
Muon g-2
Rare Symmetry Violating Processes
8National Synchrotron Light Source
- Produces x-ray, ultraviolet, and infrared beams
for research in physics, chemistry, medicine,
materials science, and more - 2,400 visiting researchers each year
- Research highlights how nerves and muscles work
smaller, faster computer chips understanding
arthritis/osteoporosis
9National Synchrotron Light Source-II
- State-of-the-art, medium-energy electron storage
ring - Designed to deliver world-leading x-ray
brightness, more than 10,000 times brighter than
the current NSLS
10Center for Functional Nanomaterials
- One of five DOE nanocenters
- Will provide researchers with state-of-the-art
capabilities to fabricate and study materials at
the nanoscale
- Examples Improved solar energy conversion more
efficient catalysts new drugs stronger and
lighter materials - Construction begins 2005 fully operational by
2008
11Biology and Life Sciences
- World-renowned neuroimaging program on addiction,
obesity, multiple sclerosis, and more - Basic studies of DNA and proteins, microbes and
plants, medical isotopes and cancer - Research on the biological effects of space
radiation and measures to protect future
astronauts
12Center for Translational Neuroimaging
- Features network of complementary brain-imaging
tools (PET, MRI) - Major medical themes include studying
relationships between genes, the brain, and
behavior in drug addiction, eating disorders, and
aggression and factors that contribute to
neurodegeneration - Research goals include development of new
radiotracers, imaging methods and techniques, and
instruments, and imaging awake animals
13NASA Space Radiation Laboratory
- Unique in simulating the harsh cosmic and solar
radiation environment found in space - Uses beams of heavy ions from Labs Booster
accelerator
- Features dedicated radiobiology beamline,
state-of-the-art specimen-preparation areas - Hosts more than 75 users from 20 institutions
worldwide
14Computational Biology Center
- Working with Department of Energy to establish a
Computational
Biology Center at Brookhaven - Regional resource for industry, universities
- High-end machines, support staff, research group
- Extensive use by NIH-funded researchers,
industry - New, massively parallel computers will have
significant impacts in biology but are expensive,
specialized, and require staff for effective
utilization - Why Brookhaven?
- Large concentration of users in Northeast
- Builds on experience with QCDOC
- Support from BNL core universities, Stony Brook,
Sloan-Kettering, Cold Spring Harbor, Rockefeller
University
15Computational Biology Center (contd)
- Structure Prediction and Modeling Understanding
the mechanism by which botulinum toxin penetrates
cell membranes. - Drug - Protein Interactions Studying anti-cancer
agents - activators of the p53 tumor suppressor
protein - Computer-assisted protein engineering
Re-engineering enzymes (desaturases) that modify
plant oils
16Energy, Environment, and National Security
- Developing sensors to detect and intercept
chemical, biological, and radiological materials - Testing fuel cells, biofuels, and other
alternative power sources - Exploring relationship between air quality,
Earths climate and ecosystems
17Fueling Local and State Economy
- FY 2003 employee salaries, wages, and fringe
benefits accounted for 274 million, or 62
percent, of the Labs total budget - employees
spend locally - 2004 economic report - Direct spending in N.Y.
State by Brookhaven staff and users from fiscal
1993 to 2003 - Totaled more than 4.76 billion
- Caused States output of goods and services to
increase by 9.2 billion and created 79,000
secondary jobs - FY05-FY14 projected Brookhaven spending will
increase State output 11 billion, create 91,000
secondary jobs, strongly benefit States key
manufacturing industries
18Brookhavens Regional Relationships
- Brookhaven is a vital resource for scientists and
industry in N.Y. State and the Northeastern U.S. - More than 1,000 N.Y. State facility users SUNY
schools IBM Albert Einstein College of
Medicine Columbia University Corning Northrop
Grumman, Howard Hughes Medical Institute New
York University Pfizer Rockefeller University - NSLS Thirty-four percent of users come from N.Y.
institutions, making N.Y. scientists the largest
user group. Another 22 percent come from nearby
Northeastern states - NSLS-SUNY connection 179 Stony Brook researchers
using NSLS to study geology, cell biology, and
more - RHIC-SUNY connection More than 50 Stony Brook
researchers studying the state of matter at the
dawn of the universe
19A Passion for Discovery