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Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source

<!--HTML-->Fermilab, the US’s primary laboratory for particle physics, proposes a plan to maintain leadership for the laboratory and U.S. particle physics in the quest to discover the fundamental nature of the physical universe in the decades ahead. Discoveries of the physics of the Quantum U...

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Autor principal: Young-Kee KIM
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1098153
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author Young-Kee KIM
author_facet Young-Kee KIM
author_sort Young-Kee KIM
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->Fermilab, the US’s primary laboratory for particle physics, proposes a plan to maintain leadership for the laboratory and U.S. particle physics in the quest to discover the fundamental nature of the physical universe in the decades ahead. Discoveries of the physics of the Quantum Universe would come from powerful next generation particle accelerators. Fermilab’s Tevatron, currently the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, will shut down by the end of this decade after the LHC at CERN begins operations. At the LHC, U.S. physicists will join scientists from around the world in the exploration of the physics of the Terascale. To follow the LHC, physicists propose the International Linear Collider, a globally funded and operated accelerator to build on LHC results and illuminate Terascale science. Fermilab will work to host the proposed ILC in the U.S. as soon as possible, maintaining the nation’s historic leadership of frontier particle physics. Should events postpone the start of the ILC, Fermilab would build an intensity-frontier accelerator at one percent of the ILC’s length and combine it with existing accelerators to create Project X. Project X’s intense beams would give Fermilab’s scientific users a new way into the world of neutrinos and precision physics. With its ILC technology, Project X would spur U.S. industrialization and reduce costs of ILC components while advancing accelerator science for future applications in particle physics and beyond. In addition, Project X would drive forward the technology for still higher-energy accelerators of the future, such as a muon collider. Fermilab’s plan would maintain the nation’s leadership in particle physics, keeping the laboratory and U.S. particle physics on the pathway to discovery both at the Terascale with the ILC and beyond, and in the domain of neutrinos and precision physics at the intensity frontier.
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spelling cern-10981532022-11-02T22:20:16Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1098153engYoung-Kee KIMFermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton SourceFermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton SourceCERN Colloquium<!--HTML-->Fermilab, the US’s primary laboratory for particle physics, proposes a plan to maintain leadership for the laboratory and U.S. particle physics in the quest to discover the fundamental nature of the physical universe in the decades ahead. Discoveries of the physics of the Quantum Universe would come from powerful next generation particle accelerators. Fermilab’s Tevatron, currently the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, will shut down by the end of this decade after the LHC at CERN begins operations. At the LHC, U.S. physicists will join scientists from around the world in the exploration of the physics of the Terascale. To follow the LHC, physicists propose the International Linear Collider, a globally funded and operated accelerator to build on LHC results and illuminate Terascale science. Fermilab will work to host the proposed ILC in the U.S. as soon as possible, maintaining the nation’s historic leadership of frontier particle physics. Should events postpone the start of the ILC, Fermilab would build an intensity-frontier accelerator at one percent of the ILC’s length and combine it with existing accelerators to create Project X. Project X’s intense beams would give Fermilab’s scientific users a new way into the world of neutrinos and precision physics. With its ILC technology, Project X would spur U.S. industrialization and reduce costs of ILC components while advancing accelerator science for future applications in particle physics and beyond. In addition, Project X would drive forward the technology for still higher-energy accelerators of the future, such as a muon collider. Fermilab’s plan would maintain the nation’s leadership in particle physics, keeping the laboratory and U.S. particle physics on the pathway to discovery both at the Terascale with the ILC and beyond, and in the domain of neutrinos and precision physics at the intensity frontier.oai:cds.cern.ch:10981532008
spellingShingle CERN Colloquium
Young-Kee KIM
Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source
title Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source
title_full Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source
title_fullStr Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source
title_full_unstemmed Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source
title_short Fermilab Plan with a High Intensity Proton Source
title_sort fermilab plan with a high intensity proton source
topic CERN Colloquium
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1098153
work_keys_str_mv AT youngkeekim fermilabplanwithahighintensityprotonsource