{"id":6576,"date":"2020-08-24T08:47:20","date_gmt":"2020-08-24T07:47:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=6576"},"modified":"2024-09-04T21:10:38","modified_gmt":"2024-09-04T20:10:38","slug":"the-electron-ion-collider-a-new-frontier-in-nuclear-physics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/the-electron-ion-collider-a-new-frontier-in-nuclear-physics\/6576\/","title":{"rendered":"The Electron-Ion Collider \u2013 a new frontier in nuclear physics"},"content":{"rendered":"
Science has always been about understanding the world around and within us. At the US Department of Energy\u2019s national laboratories, we take that search for knowledge and the application of what we learn in many directions\u2014from examining the electronic structure of materials for designing better batteries<\/a>, to searching for drugs that might thwart the deadly coronavirus; from producing new isotopes for treating cancer<\/a>, to modelling the evolution of the cosmos. Within the next decade, we will be embarking on an exciting new journey into an unexplored frontier in nuclear physics\u2014deep into the particles that make up the nuclei of atoms.<\/p>\n Scientists at our two institutions \u2014 Brookhaven National Laboratory<\/a> and Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility<\/a> (Jefferson Lab)\u2014together with researchers at other national labs and universities throughout the US, will join forces with partners from around the world to build the world\u2019s first polarised Electron-Ion Collider. Supported by ~US$1.6-2.6 billion in funding from the US Department of Energy\u2019s Office of Science and $100m from New York State, this new world-class research facility will collide high energy electrons with protons and the nuclei of heavier atoms such as gold to produce precision 3D snapshots of quarks and gluons \u2013 the building blocks of all visible matter \u2013 and unlock the secrets of the strongest force in Nature.<\/p>\n This journey will pick up on the exploration of the proton, nuclei, and nuclear matter that has been underway for more than two decades at our two institutions.\u00a0 Since 2000, scientists have used Brookhaven\u2019s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) to explore the characteristics of nuclear matter, discovering unexpected details about what matter was like in the very early Universe. We will even reuse some of that facility\u2019s still ground-breaking accelerator components and draw on the expertise gained while vastly expanding its capabilities over the past 20 years. Likewise, since 1995, scientists have used Jefferson Lab\u2019s Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility<\/a> (CEBAF) to discover new details of the quark structure of protons, neutrons, and nuclei.<\/p>\n Building on these discoveries, the Electron-Ion Collider will extend our knowledge and technological capabilities in completely new ways, with wide-ranging impacts in nuclear physics and beyond.<\/p>\n