{"id":17793,"date":"2022-02-03T13:39:19","date_gmt":"2022-02-03T13:39:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=17793"},"modified":"2022-02-03T13:39:19","modified_gmt":"2022-02-03T13:39:19","slug":"assessing-feasibility-future-circular-collider","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/assessing-feasibility-future-circular-collider\/17793\/","title":{"rendered":"Assessing the feasibility for a Future Circular Collider"},"content":{"rendered":"
Based at the University of Saskatchewan (USask), the Canadian Light Source (CLS) is one of the largest science projects in Canada\u2019s history, producing the brightest light in the country\u2014millions of times brighter than the Sun. Now, USask and CLS have teamed up with CERN \u2013 the European Organization for Nuclear Research \u2013 to pave the way for a new accelerator with unrivalled capabilities.<\/p>\n
In 2021, the three organisations signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for the Future Circular Collider (FCC) Feasibility Study. The organisations will now work together to draft designs and assess the financial and technical feasibility of a new particle accelerator that will have sensitivity to energy scales an order of magnitude higher than current accelerators. The Feasibility Study is due to be delivered by the end of 2025.<\/p>\n
Innovation News Network<\/em>\u00a0spoke to Mark Boland, Machine Director at the Canadian Light Source, to find out more about the collaboration, CLS\u2019 established relationship with CERN, and the implications that the Study will have for future discovery.<\/p>\n The Canadian Light Source dates back to the early 1960s. The office that I am currently sitting in was the Office of the Director of the Saskatchewan Accelerator Laboratory, which utilised a linear particle accelerator using electrons to carry out nuclear physics experiments.<\/p>\n In 1999, that reached the end of its life as a nuclear facility and was used as the injector to a new Canadian light source. So, next to and on top of the building that I am in here is the Canadian Light Source building. That now uses the electrons from the particle accelerator to generate bright beams of light in a ring. The science laboratories sit around this ring and use the light to illuminate their samples. From studying COVID-19 to investigating batteries, the source presents a vast range of opportunities and can aid scientists in many disciplines, from biology to fundamental physics.<\/p>\n I was hired in a dual role, as a physics professor at the University of Saskatchewan and on secondment as the Machine Director for the CLS. I lead the division responsible for running the accelerators that generate the light. The other divisions include finance and corporate service, and the science division that uses the light to carry out experiments, together with thousands of users from Canada and around the world.<\/p>\n I oversee a graduate student programme and look after research grants, responsible for making new discoveries and planning for the future. As the Machine Director, I am accountable for setting up the structure and making key decisions.<\/p>\n We are currently looking towards a new phase of the Canadian Light Source. We are considering ideas for the next generation of machine, which will produce the next generation of light and new breakthroughs in science.<\/p>\n We have a longstanding relationship with CERN and users from Canadian research institutes have been travelling to support CERN for many years. It is not just the Canadian Light Source \u2013 in fact, there is a larger contribution to CERN from TRIUMF, which is a particle accelerator laboratory in British Columbia. They are looking predominantly at the detector side of things and superconducting technology, whereas we focus more on accelerator design and, more specifically, designing rings.<\/p>\n There is large synergy between the physics, technology, and science of designing a ring to store a beam of particles. In our case, we want to store that beam of particles to create light. CERN, however, is interested in storing a beam of particles to collide them. Nonetheless, if you look at the computer codes and the fundamental physics of electromagnetic theory, they are all identical, but are just applied in a different way. This explains the strong connection between CLS and CERN.<\/p>\n Superficially, it looks like there is no link but, if you look deeper at what drives both facilities, it is particle accelerator physics and technology.<\/p>\nCan you start by outlining your role at the Canadian Light Source and explain more about the CLS as a facility and its longstanding relationship with CERN?<\/h3>\n