CERN : a gateway to fundamental research Research & Discovery Training Technology Collaborating

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CERN : a gateway to CERN : a gateway to fundamental researchfundamental research

Research & Discovery

Training

Technology

Collaborating

CERN in Numbers• 2502 staff*• 776 Fellows and Associates* • 8855 users*• Budget (2007) 982 MCHF

(610M Euro)*17 July 2007

• Member States: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

• Observers: India, Israel, Japan, the Russian Federation, the United States of America, Turkey, the European Commission and Unesco

CERN: a European laboratory open to the world

CERN is open to international collaboration from all over the world.

Besides the possibility for any institute with adequate backgrounds to join in the experimental program of CERN through participation in any of the CERN experiments

Collaboration agreements (and in many cases formal implementation protocols) have been established with countries and institutes all over the world

Countries with continuing collaboration and substantial contribution to the CERN accelerator program obtain the status of ‘Observer State’ which allows formal participation to the Open CERN Council meetings

In Asia: Japan, India are observer states

CERN policy towards non-member states is based on enlightened self interest and mutual benefits

The strengths of CERN’s relations with different countries depend on the match between CERN’s programme and the means and interests of these countries

Since early 2000 the CERN council has endorsed, amongst other directives towards non-member state activities, a policy addressed to increase CERN’s collaboration with the rapidly developing countries in South and East ASIA

CERN priorities with respect to new collaborations

•Facilitate completion of LHC and its experiments and assuring a sustainable framework for their exploitation

•Encourage cooperation on R&D in support of possible LHC upgrades and improvements of the CERN proton accelerator complex

•Expand Non-member state participation in the CLIC R&D program

•Lay a basis for collaboration on CERN’s future major projects

CERN

Today

2008

ATLAS (spokesperson Peter Jenni)

Number of scientists: 1800

Number of institutes: 164

Number of countries: 35

ATLAS Cavern

The CMS Detector

MUON BARREL

Silicon MicrostripsPixels

ECAL Scintillating PbWO4 crystals

Cathode Strip Chambers Resistive Plate Chambers

Drift Tube Chambers

Resistive Plate Chambers

SUPERCONDUCTINGCOIL

IRON YOKE

TRACKER

MUONENDCAPS

Total weight : 12,500 tOverall diameter : 15 mOverall length : 21.6 mMagnetic field : 4 Tesla

HCAL

Plastic scintillator/brasssandwich

CALORIMETERS(Spokesperson Prof. Tejinder Virdee)

Number of scientists: 1961

Number of institutes: 180

Number of countries: 37

CMS: tracker insertion

Computing: Gridhttp://lcg.web.cern.ch/LCG/

Enabling Grids for E-sciencE

EGEE-II INFSO-RI-031688

GRID:The EGEE project• EGEE

– 1 April 2004 – 31 March 2006– 71 partners in 27 countries, grouped into regional federations

• EGEE-II– 1 April 2006 – 31 March 2008– 91 partners in 32 countries – 13 federations

• Objectives– Large-scale, production-quality

grid infrastructure for e-Science – Attracting new resources and

users from industry as well asscience

– Maintain and further improve“gLite” Grid middleware

CERN

The future

June Council (quote from R. Aymar – June 2007)

PSB

SPSSPS+

Linac4

(LP)SPL

PS

LHC / SLHC DLHC

Out

put

ener

gy

160 MeV

1.4 GeV4 GeV

26 GeV50 GeV

450 GeV1 TeV

7 TeV~ 14 TeV

Linac250 MeV

(LP)SPL: (Low Power) Superconducting Proton Linac (4-5 GeV)

PS2: High Energy PS(~ 5 to 50 GeV – 0.3 Hz)

SPS+: Superconducting SPS(50 to1000 GeV)

SLHC: “Superluminosity” LHC(up to 1035 cm-2s-1)

DLHC: “Double energy” LHC(1 to ~14 TeV)

Updated list of future accelerators

PS2

Present accelerators Future accelerators

• (LP)SPL is the baseline injector for PS2• PS2 will use nc magnets• PS2 size is 15/77 of

SPS

Layout of the new accelerators SPS

PS2

(LP)SPL

Linac4

PS

CERN Council Strategy Group(Lisbon July 2006)

The ILC Plan and Schedule

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Global Design Effort Project

Baseline configuration

Reference Design

ILC R&D Program

Technical Design

Expression of Interest to Host

International Mgmt

LHCPhysics

CLIC(B.Barish/CERN/SPC 050913)

* India participating through a special agreement with CERN for the development of novel accelerator technologies

19 members represent. 24 institutes involving 16 funding agencies from 13 countries

Collab. Board: Chairperson: M.Calvetti/INFN; Spokesperson: G.Geschonke/CERNMoU with addenda describing specific contribution (& resources)

CLIC/CTF3 Multi-Lateral Collaboration of Volunteer Institutes

Organized as a Physics Detector Collaboration

CLIC/CTF3 collaboration observers

Present collaboration with RAL on Laser development for PHIN in EU FP6 CARE

Discussion with possible future collaboration partners:

Finnish Industry (Finland)Gazi Universities (Turkey)Helsinki Institute of Physics (Finland) IAP (Russia)Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular (Spain) INFN / LNF (Italy)J. Addams Institute (UK)

NCP (Pakistan)PSI (Switzerland)North-West. Univ. Illinois (USA)Polytech. University of Catalonia (Spain)RAL (UK) SLAC (USA)Svedberg Laboratory (Sweden) Uppsala University (Sweden)

Ankara University (Turkey)Berlin Tech. Univ. (Germany) BINP (Russia)CERNCIEMAT (Spain)DAPNIA/Saclay (France)RRCAT-Indore (India)

JASRI (Japan) Jefferson Lab (USA)JINR (Russia) KEK (Japan) LAL/Orsay (France) LAPP/ESIA (France)LLBL/LBL (USA)

World-wide CLIC&CTF3 Collaboration

Asian collaborations

• Observer states: – Japan: contributed 136MCHF to CERN

accelerator program and R&D– India: contributed 30 MCHF to CERN accelerators

program and 3 MCHF on CLIC and LINAC4/SPl R&D

– Both India and Japan have strong collaborations with CERN experiments

– India and Japan have strong involvement in the LHC computing grid

Asian collaboration agreements• China: 1991 CAS 1997 NSFC

2004 Government of PRC. Participate in LHC experimental program, some contribution to SPL/Linac4, joining CLIC R&D, LHC grid computing

• Iran 2001 Ministry of science, participates in LHC experimental program and CLIC R&D

• Korea 2006 M.O.S.T, 2007 Protocol. Participates in LHC experimental program• Pakistan 2004 Government of IRP

– 2003 protocol pledged 5 M$ – 2007 protocol addendum additional 5 MCHFInvolved in LHC experimental program, CLIC, SPL. Candidate to become observer state

• Saudi Arabia 2006 Government of Kingdom: students involved in CERN programs and CLIC

• U.A.E. 2006 Government UAE : mainly students involved in CERN experimental program

• Vietnam: 2007 CA signed by CERN and waiting signature Acad. Of Science

Contacts

• Mongolia, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore,Sri-Lanka have established contacts through visits at CERN of government officials, but have not yet come to any formal collaboration agreement

CERN as an Educator

Successful Educational programs

Summer Summer student program: program for undergraduate students (strong selection:1/10 of applicants are selected ) to spend 8-12 weeks of formation at CERN during summer time

High School teacher program: CERN hosts every summer a program of formation for High school teachers

'We expect that students/teachers from developed countries will be able to secure travel and local expenses from their own national sources. We may have some very limited funds available to pay the local expenses for students/teachers from other countries.

Fellow and associate program: some countries provide support for having PHDs spend between 1 and two years working on the CERN accelerator or Experimental program

Bringing Nations Together

“…the promotion of contacts between, and

the interchange of, scientists…”

CERN…

• Seeking answers to questions about the Universe• Advancing the frontiers of technology• Training the scientists of tomorrow• Bringing nations together through science: mutual

interests in technology development and research being the fundamental ingredient of collaboration

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