WASHINGTON, Jan. 30, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A new report from a government committee chaired by Texas A&M University physicist Robert Tribble has major implications for the future of U.S. nuclear science.
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Tribble, director of the Texas A&M Cyclotron Institute, oversaw the creation of the report, accepted Jan. 29 by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)/National Science Foundation (NSF) Nuclear Science Advisory Committee (NSAC) and slated for public release in about a week once it is transmitted to the two agencies. Tribble served a 3-year term as chair of the NSAC from 2006-09 and was asked in May 2012 by the current chair, Argonne National Laboratory's Donald Geesaman, to lead a subcommittee charged with examining the impact of different budgetary scenarios on the nation's nuclear science program and how to maintain U.S. leadership in nuclear science despite budgetary constraints.
Condition Critical
Tribble's subcommittee is advocating for a 1.6 percent increase per year in the DOE's current nuclear physics budget of roughly $530 million annually, an amount he says is necessary to prevent the U.S. from losing its competitive edge in the field. Budgets short of that level of funding would result in a major reduction of capabilities in the U.S. program.
"If we don't invest in the fundamental-discovery sciences, we might not be able to take advantage of the next major technological breakthrough," said Tribble, after discussing the final report earlier this week with his 21-person committee. "If you look at history, all of our technology now came from discovery science. It was not science funded by anyone to make a product. It was just, 'why is this happening?'"
Tribble's advisory panel zeroed in on examining the future of three key national laboratories that are the backbone of the U.S. nuclear physics program: Brookhaven National Laboratory's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC); the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) in Newport News, Va.; and a planned $615 million lab at Michigan State University called the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB).
Scientists in these labs are conducting research that could potentially be world-changing. At Brookhaven, Tribble notes, researchers are studying a new form of matter that has similar properties to the kind that would have been around roughly 14 billion years ago just an instant after the Big Bang, what's thought to be the earliest moment in the history of the universe.
Nuclear to the Core
Tribble, a distinguished professor of physics and an international leader in experimental nuclear physics and nuclear astrophysics, joined the Texas A&M faculty in 1975. He has served since 2003 as director of the Cyclotron Institute, which represents the core of the university's nuclear physics and nuclear chemistry program.
The institute, which operates one of only four university-based DOE-funded laboratories equipped with one of only five K500 superconducting cyclotrons worldwide, serves as a major technical and educational resource for both Texas and the U.S. In addition to educating thousands of students in accelerator-based science and technology, it brings in more than $3 million annually in external use and testing by companies such as Boeing and Lockheed-Martin that rent time on the cyclotron for their own research projects.
Beyond traditional research and teaching, the institute also plays a vital role in the general university's K-12 outreach, undergraduate research and teacher-training programs, helping to pave educational pathways and prepare young people for careers in the nuclear industry while building an informed knowledge base with the potential to shape future nuclear policy.
For more information, see http://www.science.tamu.edu/articles/Texas+A%26M+Physicist%27s+Committee+Weighs+in+on+Future+of+U.S.+Nuclear+Science
About Research at Texas A&M University: As one of the world's leading research institutions, Texas A&M is in the vanguard in making significant contributions to the storehouse of knowledge, including that of science and technology. Research conducted at Texas A&M represents an annual investment of more than $700 million. That research creates new knowledge that provides basic, fundamental and applied contributions resulting in many cases in economic benefits to the state, nation and world.
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SOURCE Texas A&M University
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