home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky sci.physics:22269 soc.culture.soviet:11909 misc.headlines:7430 sci.energy:6732
- Newsgroups: sci.physics,soc.culture.soviet,misc.headlines,sci.energy
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!cs.utexas.edu!torn!newshub.ccs.yorku.ca!ists!pci!r-node!ndallen
- From: ndallen@r-node.pci.on.ca
- Subject: U.S., Russia Sign Agreement on Super Collider
- Organization: Echo Beach, Toronto
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 17:59:56 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan7.175956.45497@r-node.pci.on.ca>
- Lines: 74
-
- Here is a press release from the U.S. Department of Energy.
-
- U.S., Russia Sign Agreement on Super Collider
- To: National and Foreign desks, Energy Writer
- Contact: Jeff Sherwood of the U.S. Department of Energy,
- 202-586-5806
-
- WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 -- Secretary of Energy James D. Watkins
- signed a government-to-government agreement today between the
- United States Department of Energy and the Russian Federation
- Ministry of Atomic Energy (MINATOM) for a program of collaboration on
- the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC).
- "This historic agreement calls for Russian participation in the
- design, engineering and production of two of the project's booster
- accelerators," Watkins said. "Russian scientists and engineers are
- working on site in Texas at the SSC Laboratory. This is the third
- country to join in this international project, China and India having
- already begun international participation."
- Vladimir Lukin, Ambassador of the Russian Federation, presented
- the agreement to Watkins at the signing ceremony. Minister Victor
- Mikhailov of MINATOM signed the agreement on behalf of the Russian
- Federation in Moscow in December.
- As part of this cooperation, the SSC Laboratory and six Russian
- laboratories have signed laboratory-to-laboratory agreements. The
- Budker Institute for Nuclear Physics (BINP) in Novosibirsk concluded
- an agreement in January 1992, to design, engineer and build
- conventional magnets for the SSC's Low Energy Booster. An agreement
- to build quadrupole, or focusing, magnets for the SSC's Medium Energy
- Booster at the Radiotechnical Institute (MRTI) in Moscow was signed
- this week. These agreements represent a potential total savings to
- the U.S. of more than $100 million as an offset to the project's
- baseline cost.
- In addition to the agreements to build components for the SSC
- accelerators, the Institute for High Energy Physics (IHEP) in
- Protvino, the Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute, the Joint
- Institute of Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna and the Institute of
- Theoretical and Experimental Physics (ITEP) in Moscow signed
- agreements in 1992 with the SSC Laboratory for collaboration on the
- design and construction of the SSC experimental detectors.
- Discussions are ongoing regarding components that could be provided
- for the accelerators.
- The Low and Medium Energy Boosters are two of a sequence of five
- accelerators at the SSC. The 0.35 mile (0.54 km) Low Energy Booster
- will receive beams of protons from a linear accelerator at an energy
- of 600 million electron volts and boost their energy with radio
- frequency pulses to 11 billion electron volts. The 2.4 mile (4 km)
- Medium Energy Booster will further accelerate the beams to 200
- bllion electron volts. Both these boosters use resistive
- electromagnets to guide the protons. The beams then will enter a
- 6.7 mile (10.8 km) High Energy Booster that will increase the
- protons' energies to 2 trillion electron volts and then inject the
- beams in opposite directions into the main 54 mile (87 km) collider
- rings to be guided by superconducting magnets. The collider will
- then further accelerate the two beams to 20 trillion electron volts
- so that the resulting collision between the beams will occur with a
- total energy of up to 40 trillion electron volts.
- In addition to the Russian partnership, India joined the SSC in
- 1988 and is currently working on the design and fabrication of
- beam-line transfer magnets, correction magnets and radio-frequency
- equipment. The Department of Energy and the Chinese Academy of
- Sciences signed a government-to-government agreement in November
- 1992, under which the Institute for High Energy Physics in Beijing
- will build the cavity-coupled Linac, which is the largest section of
- the SSC's linear accelerator. Technical discussions regarding other
- items to be provided by the People's Republic of China are ongoing.
- The Superconducting Super Collider, under construction in Ellis
- County, Texas, near Dallas and Fort Worth, will be the world's most
- powerful particle accelerator. It will be used to conduct research
- on the fundamental nature of matter and energy.
- The Universities Research Association operates the SSC Laboratory
- for the Department of Energy.
- -30-
- --
- Nigel Allen, Toronto, Ontario ndallen@r-node.gts.org
-