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NSF awards FSU Physics Department $4.4 million
for nuclear research
Florida State University's internationally renowned
nuclear physics program will expand its experimental
capabilities with a new $4.4-million grant from the
National Science Foundation.
FSU's Department of Physics (http://www.physics.fsu.edu/) has just
received a three-year grant from the NSF to fund a
research project titled "Studies of Nuclear Reactions
and Structure." The project will support fundamental
research in experimental nuclear physics and the
training of doctoral students for service to the nation
in scientific research, education and national security,
as well as the enhancement of economic
competitiveness.
"This grant expresses a great vote of confidence in
our laboratory by the NSF," said Samuel L. Tabor, the
Norman P. Heydenburg Professor of Physics at FSU and
director of the university's John D. Fox Superconducting
Accelerator Laboratory. "We are excited about the
opportunities it will provide for developing forefront
research and for training students."
Within Tabor's laboratory, the NSF grant will
increase the capabilities of the new RESOLUT rare ion
facility, which enables researchers to fire a beam of
atomic particles through a steel tube at speeds
approaching 60 million miles per hour -- roughly
one-tenth the speed of light -- and then to observe the
nuclear reactions that occur. Knowledge of such
reactions is critical to the field of astrophysics and
the interpretation of observations made by new
astronomical observatories around the world.
"Using RESOLUT, we are able to study how the most
fundamental property of nuclear structure, the shells,
changes with increasing imbalance in the proportion of
neutrons to protons," Tabor said. "The accelerator
laboratory also is an ideal hands-on training ground for
Ph.D. students. We look forward to being able to provide
even more students with these unique research
opportunities."
To learn more about research being conducted at the
RESOLUT facility read "Star light, star bright: FSU facility
duplicating conditions of supernovas."
Nineteen students currently are pursuing doctoral
research in experimental nuclear physics at FSU. They
come from as close as Florida and as far away as India,
drawn to FSU by research opportunities unavailable at
all but a handful of U.S. universities. More information
about the laboratory is available at <www.physics.fsu.edu/nuclear>.
The past two years have been a period of substantial
growth for FSU's nuclear physics program. In addition to
the development of RESOLUT, a nuclear theorist,
Professor Winston Roberts, has joined the physics
faculty. And in 2007, the physics department was chosen
as the host site for the National Nuclear Physics Summer School
-- a significant honor typically accorded to the top
nuclear physics programs at U.S. universities.
"As a member of the experimental nuclear group
myself, I am obviously very pleased with this wonderful
news -- but as the chair of the department, I am doubly
pleased," said Mark Riley, the Raymond K. Sheline
Professor of Physics at FSU. "This renewal award is a
most significant vote of confidence by our peers and the
NSF of the continued vitality and impact of the research
carried out by the outstanding nuclear faculty and
students at FSU." |