Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, April 13–16, 2013; Denver, Colorado
Session L6: Invited Session: Intensity Frontier: Accelerators |
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Sponsoring Units: DPB Chair: Donald Hartill, Cornell University Room: Governor's Square 15 |
Sunday, April 14, 2013 3:30PM - 4:06PM |
L6.00001: Near Term Prospects at FNAL and Project X Invited Speaker: Stuart Henderson Project X, a high-power proton accelerator facility, will support world-leading programs in long baseline neutrino physics, the physics of rare processes, and nuclear studies. It will be unique among accelerator facilities worldwide in its flexibility to support multiple physics programs simultaneously with MWclass beams at the intensity frontier. Project X is based on a 3 GeV continuous-wave superconducting H-linac. Further acceleration to 8 GeV, and injection into Fermilab's existing Recycler/Main Injector complex, will support long-baseline neutrino experiments. Project X will provide 1 MW beam power at 1 GeV, 3 MW beam power at 3 GeV and 2 MW beam power to a neutrino production target at 60-120 GeV. This talk will describe the Reference Design of Project X and the status of the R\&D program. [Preview Abstract] |
Sunday, April 14, 2013 4:06PM - 4:42PM |
L6.00002: European Spallation Source Progress Invited Speaker: Steve Peggs |
Sunday, April 14, 2013 4:42PM - 5:18PM |
L6.00003: J-PARC Future Plans Invited Speaker: Yujiro Ikeda J-PARC is a high-intensity accelerator-based research facility for particle and nuclear physics, materials and life sciences, and nuclear transmutation technology. It is featured by terms of ``multi-purpose'' and ``intensity frontier accelerator.'' Maximum proton power of 1MW is a current goal to provide a various secondary particles, e.g., neutron and muon in Materials{\&} Life Facility (MLF), kaon in Hadron Facility (HD) and neutrino for cutting edge science quest. So far, J-PARC has opened a firm user operation, and we confirm the initial scientific goal of MW regime will be realized. In this talk, summarizing the current status of J-PARC operation along with highlight of some scientific results in user the program, direction is addressed on J-PARC future plans, which have been under extensive discussion by user communities of all related research fields. For examples the particle-nuclear physics is requesting higher intensity of FX beam under a multi-MW power regime for further neutrino oscillation experiment. The SX beam more than 100 kW is desired for hadron-nuclear physics rare kaon decays, as well as muon to electron conversion experiment. In addition, there is a new approach in MLF to perform precision measurement of muon anomalous magnetic moment, g-2, as well as electric dipole moment A second neutron target station could be a consequence of request by neutron user community in the future to realize new neutron and muon micro-scopes, which might bring a breakthrough in the soft-matter science such as slow dynamics of materials. [Preview Abstract] |
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