HEP Accelerator Stewardship | U.S. DOE Office of Science (SC)
Official websites use .gov
.gov
website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
lock
) or
means you’ve safely connected to
the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official,
secure websites.
Accelerator Stewardship
Image courtesy of Fermilab.
This superconducting radiofrequency accelerator cavity made from niobium was developed for the International Linear Collider, which would use 16,000 such cavities. A cavity like this could produce beams of 10-20 MeV energy electrons for industrial, security, and medical uses.
Accelerator Stewardship works to make particle accelerator technology widely available to science and industry by supporting use-inspired basic research in accelerator science and technology. Particle accelerators can provide transformational capabilities in the fields of energy and environment, medicine, industry, national security, and discovery science. Experts from across the spectrum of accelerator applications identified opportunities and challenges for particle beams in these fields in the
Accelerators for America's Future
report. The Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Science (SC) established the Accelerator Stewardship subprogram to address these challenges and develop accelerators that meet national needs. Office of High Energy Physics (HEP) hosts the Accelerator Stewardship program because significant advances in accelerator technology have been driven by particle physicists as a means to enable their discovery science and HEP directly supports many of the experts and infrastructure that make these advances possible.
Accelerator Stewardship improves access to national laboratory accelerator facilities and resources for industrial and other U.S. government agency users as well as the developers of accelerators and related technology. The Accelerator Stewardship program operates a dedicated National User Facility, the Accelerator Test Facility at Brookhaven National Laboratory, which provides a testbed for university, laboratory, and industry users to explore the science of particle acceleration and develop new accelerator technologies. The Accelerator Stewardship Test Facility Pilot Program launched in FY 2015 to enhance awareness of, and access to, accelerator test facilities and capabilities
Accelerator Stewardship develops innovative solutions to critical problems by providing grants for use-inspired R&D focused on the topics of interest identified by the federal stakeholders of the Stewardship program. Addressing these complex challenges requires cross-cutting partnerships that draw scientific and technical expertise from universities and industrial accelerator providers in addition to the specialized resources and facilities found at national laboratories. Through this process, the Accelerator Stewardship subprogram works with the broad accelerator user communities and industrial accelerator providers to develop solutions that mutually benefit our customers and the DOE discovery science community
Image courtesy of ANL.
Interested visitors hear about the capabilities of the Argonne Wakefield Accelerator at Argonne National Laboratory’s recent open house
Accelerator Stewardship broadens and strengthens the community of accelerator users and providers by engaging the entire U.S. accelerator R&D ecosystem in a coordinated manner to solve high-impact challenges. Workshops and Requests for Information are used to identify target application areas with broad impact. Early community efforts identified the initial topics of interest as accelerator technologies for ion beam therapy of cancer, laser technologies for accelerators, and energy and environmental applications of accelerators. As the program evolves, new cross-cutting areas of research will be identified based on input from the federal stakeholders, R&D performers, and U.S. industry.
HEP manages Accelerator Stewardship in close consultation with its federal stakeholders, which include SC program offices, including
Nuclear Physics
(NP) and
Basic Energy Sciences
(BES), and other federal stakeholders of accelerator technology, most notably the
National Science Foundation
(NSF), the
Department of Defense
(DOD), the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS), and the
National Institutes of Health
(NIH).
New Precise Calculation of Nuclear Beta Decays Paves the Way to Uncover Physics Beyond the Standard Model
Theorists identify new effects needed to compute the nuclear beta decay rate with a precision of a few parts in ten thousand.
Belle II Detector Produces World’s Most Precise Measurements of Subatomic Particle Lifetimes
Particle lifetime measurements with early data from the Belle II experiment at the SuperKEKB accelerator demonstrate the experiment’s high precision.
Contact High Energy Physics
Address
U.S. Department of Energy
SC-25/Germantown Building
1000 Independence Ave., SW
Washington, DC 20585
Phone
Tel(301) 903-3624
Fax(301) 903-2597
Email
Send us a message
sc.hep@science.doe.gov
Read more about
Top
Leaving Office of Science
The link you have requested will take you to a website outside the Office of Science.
Please click the following link to continue:
Thank you for visiting our site. We hope your visit was informative and enjoyable.
sub nav
US