From Space Today: US NRC Presents Long Term Priorities For US Nuclear Physics Program
Nuclear physics
is a discovery-driven enterprise aimed at understanding the fundamental
nature of visible matter in the universe. For the past hundred years,
new knowledge of the nuclear world has also directly benefited society
through many innovative applications. In its fourth decadal survey of
nuclear physics, the National Research Council outlines the impressive
accomplishments of the field in the last decade and recommends a
long-term strategy for the future.
The report builds on the Nuclear Science Advisory Committee's 2007
five-year plan and commends the Department of Energy and the National
Science Foundation for effective management of the U.S. nuclear physics
program.
Recommended priorities for the future include exploiting recent upgrades
of nuclear physics facilities, the timely completion of the Facility
for Rare Isotope
Beams, the development and implementation of a targeted program of
underground science, and the creation of two national competitions for
graduate students and postdoctoral researchers.
"The recommendations in this report will help ensure a thriving and
healthy field that continues to benefit society from new applications at
an accelerating pace," said Stuart Freedman, professor of physics at
the University of California at Berkeley, and chair of the committee
that wrote the report.
"The impact of nuclear physics extends well beyond furthering our
scientific knowledge of the nucleus and the nature and origin of visible
matter. Nuclear physics is relevant to the most important of today's
problems in energy, health, and the environment."
Sophisticated new tools and protocols have been developed for successful
management of the largest projects in nuclear physics, the report says.
But to keep the U.S. program nimble and competitive, the committee
recommends that federal agencies develop streamlined and flexible
procedures tailored for initiating and managing smaller-scale nuclear
science projects.
The report also advises the theoretical nuclear science community to
develop a plan for exploiting the rapidly increasing power of modern
computing, and to establish the infrastructure and collaborations now in
order to take advantage of these capabilities as they become available.
Additional priorities for the field should include continued investment
in accelerator and detector research and the possible development of an
electron-ion collider.
Two videos have been prepared in conjunction with the report to
illustrate several of its main ideas. The videos are suitable for
classroom use and clearly articulate the scientific rationale and
objectives for nuclear physics, placing near-term goals in a broader
international context. The videos are available here.
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