Feature Channels: Nuclear Physics

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Released: 24-Jun-2021 3:05 PM EDT
Department of Energy Announces $2.85 Million to Support Undergraduate Research Traineeships at HBCUs and other MSIs
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy awarded over $2.85 million with a focus on broadening and diversifying the nuclear and particle physics research communities through research traineeships for undergraduates from Historically Black Colleges and Universities and other Minority Serving Institutions.

Released: 21-Jun-2021 10:05 AM EDT
Argonne’s turning 75: Join the celebration!
Argonne National Laboratory

Three virtual public events during the week of June 28 will mark Argonne’s 75th anniversary. Events will spotlight U.S. Department of Energy national user facilities; the next 75 years; the road to decarbonization; and a lighthearted look at the lab.

Released: 17-Jun-2021 3:25 PM EDT
Physicist Wins Early Career Grant To Study Nuclear Physics, Quantum Phenomena
Iowa State University

The U.S. Department of Energy has selected Iowa State's Srimoyee Sen for an early career award that will help her study nuclear physics and quantum phenomena. The research could lead to the discovery of new materials that could one day contribute to speedy quantum computing or other applications.

16-Jun-2021 10:05 AM EDT
Argonne and Oak Ridge National Laboratories Award Codeplay Software to Further Strengthen SYCL™ Support Extending the Open Standard Software for AMD GPUs
Argonne National Laboratory

Argonne National Laboratory (Argonne) in collaboration with Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), has awarded Codeplay a contract implementing the oneAPI DPC++ compiler, an implementation of the SYCL open standard software, to support AMD GPU-based high-performance compute (HPC) supercomputers.

Released: 10-Jun-2021 11:35 AM EDT
Sofia Quaglioni: Then and Now / 2011 Early Career Award Winner
Department of Energy, Office of Science

As the Deputy Group Leader of the Nuclear Data and Theory Group at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Sofia Quaglioni is contributing to a unified understanding of the structure and lower-energy reactions of light nuclei.

Released: 9-Jun-2021 10:05 AM EDT
Physicists Achieve Significant Improvement in Spotting Accelerator-produced Neutrinos in a Cosmic Haystack
Brookhaven National Laboratory

Scientists demonstrate how ground-breaking image reconstruction and analysis algorithms filter out cosmic ray tracks in the MicroBooNE neutrino detector to pinpoint elusive neutrino interactions with unprecedented clarity.

Released: 7-Jun-2021 9:55 AM EDT
Machine Learning System Improves Accelerator Diagnostics
Department of Energy, Office of Science

A machine learning system is helping operators resolve routine faults at the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF). The system monitors the accelerator cavities, where faults can trip off the CEBAF. The system identified which cavities were tripping off about 85% of the time and identified the type of fault about 78% of the time.

Released: 7-Jun-2021 5:05 AM EDT
LLNL team looks at nuclear weapon effects for near-surface detonations
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

A Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory team has taken a closer look at how nuclear weapon blasts close to the Earth’s surface create complications in their effects and apparent yields. Attempts to correlate data from events with low heights of burst revealed a need to improve the theoretical treatment of strong blast waves rebounding from hard surfaces.

Released: 4-Jun-2021 2:40 PM EDT
Wayne State physics professor awarded DOE Early Career Research Program grant
Wayne State University Division of Research

Chun Shen, Ph.D., assistant professor of physics and astronomy in Wayne State University’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was awarded a five-year, $750,000 award from the U.S. Department of Energy's Early Career Research Program for his project, “Quantitative Characterization of Emerging Quark-Gluon Plasma Properties with Dynamical Fluctuations and Small Systems.”

Released: 28-May-2021 3:05 PM EDT
New Technique Studies the Structure of Exotic Hadrons
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Scientists don’t know how exotic hadrons with a larger number of quarks are structured—are they tightly bound hadrons or a compound of two hadrons similar to molecules? Now, scientists have developed a new technique to identify the nature of the χc1(3872, a four-quark hadron. This is the first time scientists have discovered the structure of a particle by observing how it interacts with nearby particles.

Released: 27-May-2021 2:00 PM EDT
Three Los Alamos scientists honored by American Nuclear Society
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Mark B. Chadwick, chief scientist and chief operating officer of Weapons Physics, and Stuart A. Maloy, deputy group leader for Materials Science at Radiation and Dynamic Extremes, were named fellows, while D.V. Rao, program director for the Laboratory’s Civilian Nuclear Program, earned a special award for making advanced nuclear energy systems a reality.

Released: 27-May-2021 1:40 PM EDT
DOE names six Argonne scientists to receive Early Career Research Program awards
Argonne National Laboratory

Six Argonne scientists receive Department of Energy’s Early Career Research Program Awards.

Released: 26-May-2021 2:10 PM EDT
Signs of “Turbulence” in Collisions that Melt Gold Ions
Department of Energy, Office of Science

A new analysis of collisions of gold ions shows signs of a “critical point,” a change in the way one form of matter changes into another. The results hint at changes in the type of transition during the shift from particles to the quark-and-gluon “soup” that filled the early universe. This helps scientists understand how particles interact and what holds them together.

Released: 19-May-2021 12:05 PM EDT
Searching for the Origins of Presolar Grains
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Some meteorites contain microscopic grains of stardust created by nucleosynthesis before our solar system existed. Many grains contain sulfur isotopes that are clues to the grains’ origins in novae and supernovae. Sulfur production from nucleosynthesis depends on the prior production of argon-34. Scientists created and studied argon-34 and established criteria for determining whether particular grains originated in novae or supernovae.

Released: 6-May-2021 2:30 PM EDT
Department of Energy Announces $10 Million for Research on Quantum Information Science and Nuclear Physics
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $10 million for interdisciplinary research in Quantum Information Science (QIS) and nuclear physics.

20-Apr-2021 3:30 PM EDT
Physicists Net Neutron Star Gold from Measurement of Lead
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

Nuclear physicists have made a new, highly accurate measurement of the thickness of the neutron “skin” that encompasses the lead nucleus in experiments conducted at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility and just published in Physical Review Letters. The result, which revealed a neutron skin thickness of .28 millionths of a nanometer, has important implications for the structure and size of neutron stars.

Released: 22-Apr-2021 8:10 AM EDT
Ultra-high-energy gamma rays originate from pulsar nebulae
Los Alamos National Laboratory

The discovery that the nebulae surrounding the most powerful pulsars are pumping out ultra-high-energy gamma rays could rewrite the book about the rays’ galactic origins. Pulsars are rapidly rotating, highly magnetized collapsed stars surrounded by nebulae powered by winds generated inside the pulsars.

Released: 16-Apr-2021 12:10 PM EDT
Canister Delivery to Strengthen Nuclear Storage Research
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Three unused, 48,000-pound stainless steel canisters arrived at PNNL, bringing the chance to deepen research in spent nuclear fuel storage and transportation.

Released: 5-Apr-2021 1:45 PM EDT
Supercomputer Calculations May Give First Look at the Structure of Two-Faced Pions
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Pions consist of a quark paired to an antiquark and are the lightest particles to experience the strong force. But until recently scientists did not understand pions’ internal structure because of their short lifespan. Now, an advance in supercomputer calculations using lattice Quantum Chromodynamics may allow scientists to provide an accurate and precise description of pion structure for the first time.

Released: 30-Mar-2021 10:05 AM EDT
Quantum Computing Tackles Calculations of Collisions
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

A new project at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility will use a quantum simulator to model experiments at the Electron-Ion Collider. This device uses quantum computing to simulate carefully crafted models of experiments that are being proposed for the collider.

Released: 16-Mar-2021 5:40 PM EDT
Caroline Nesaraja: Providing nothing but the best nuclear data
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Nuclear physicist Caroline Nesaraja of the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory evaluates nuclear data. Her work ensures that the scientific community has the best nuclear data for fundamental research and applications including medical isotopes, nuclear energy and national and international security.

Released: 16-Mar-2021 1:10 PM EDT
Scientists Describe Detector Goals for Electron-Ion Collider (EIC)
Brookhaven National Laboratory

What do you need to study the fine details of the building blocks of matter? A new kind of particle accelerator called an Electron-Ion Collider, planned to be built in the United States over the next decade, and a state-of-the-art detector to capture the action when electrons and ions collide.

Released: 11-Mar-2021 5:40 PM EST
Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Monitoring Capabilities Still in Use 10 Years After Fukushima Earthquake and Nuclear Power Plant Disaster
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

The events following the Fukushima disaster, a decade ago, drew upon Berkeley Lab’s long-standing expertise in radiation measurements and safety, and led to the creation of long-term radiation-monitoring programs, both locally and in Japan, as well as a series of radiation surveys and technology demonstrations including drone- and helicopter-based surveys, and vehicle-based and hand-carried measurements.

Released: 9-Mar-2021 9:45 AM EST
Searching for Signs of ‘Glueballs’ in Proton-Proton Smashups
Department of Energy, Office of Science

In principle, the universe should contain objects composed only of gluons in a sea of quark-antiquark pairs. However, scientists’ experiments have never definitively confirmed these hypothetical objects, called “glueballs.” Now, scientists are using the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider to search for signs of these glueballs.

Released: 5-Mar-2021 12:25 PM EST
Tantalizing Signs of Phase-change 'Turbulence' in RHIC Collisions
Brookhaven National Laboratory

A new analysis of collisions conducted at different energies at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) shows tantalizing signs of a critical point—a change in the way that quarks and gluons, the building blocks of protons and neutrons, transform from one phase to another. The findings will help physicists map out details of these nuclear phase changes to better understand the evolution of the universe and the conditions in the cores of neutron stars.

Released: 1-Mar-2021 8:35 AM EST
Scientists claim that all high-energy cosmic neutrinos are born by quasars
Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT)

Scientists of the P. N. Lebedev Physical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (LPI RAS), the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT) and the Institute for Nuclear Research of RAS (INR RAS) studied the arrival directions of astrophysical neutrinos with energies more than a trillion electronvolts (TeV) and came to an unexpected conclusion: all of them are born near black holes in the centers of distant active galaxies powerful radio sources.

Released: 25-Feb-2021 3:45 PM EST
Nuclear Physicists on the Hunt for Squeezed Protons
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

While protons populate the nucleus of every atom in the universe, sometimes they can be squeezed into a smaller size and slip out of the nucleus for a romp on their own. Observing these squeezed protons may offer unique insights into the particles that build our universe. Now, researchers hunting for these squeezed protons have come up empty-handed, suggesting there’s more to the phenomenon than first thought. The result was recently published in Physical Review Letters.

23-Feb-2021 1:10 PM EST
Nature's funhouse mirror: understanding asymmetry in the proton
Argonne National Laboratory

The results of a new experiment could shift research of the proton by reviving previously discarded theories of its inner workings.

Released: 22-Feb-2021 9:45 AM EST
'Forward' Jet-tracking Components Installed at RHIC's STAR Detector
Brookhaven National Laboratory

Just prior to the start of this year's run at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a team of scientists, engineers, technicians, and students completed the installation of important new components of the collider's STAR detector. The new components will expand STAR’s ability to track jets of particles emerging in an extreme “forward” direction to give scientists insight into how the internal components of protons and neutrons—quarks and gluons—contribute to the overall properties of these building blocks of matter.

Released: 18-Feb-2021 8:00 PM EST
Scientists Use Supercomputers to Study Reliable Fusion Reactor Design, Operation
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A team used two DOE supercomputers to complete simulations of the full-power ITER fusion device and found that the component that removes exhaust heat from ITER may be more likely to maintain its integrity than was predicted by the current trend of fusion devices.

Released: 18-Feb-2021 3:15 PM EST
Remote-Working Team to Tame Electron Beams
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

A major injector upgrade at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility was well underway early last year when the pandemic hit, throwing scientists and their long-anticipated project for a loop. Literally overnight, they had to leave their desks, control room and colleagues behind and rapidly learn how to work together from the confines of their own homes.

Released: 17-Feb-2021 5:50 PM EST
New highly radioactive particles found in Fukushima
University of Helsinki

The 10 year anniversary of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident occurs in March.

Released: 15-Feb-2021 5:05 PM EST
A New Era of Accelerator Science
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

PNNL's Jan Strube and colleagues from Germany and Japan outline the future of particle physics research using linear colliders, which could improve our understanding of dark matter and help answer fundamental questions about the universe.

Released: 1-Feb-2021 2:20 PM EST
Solving complex physics problems at lightning speed
Chalmers University of Technology

A calculation so complex that it takes twenty years to complete on a powerful desktop computer can now be done in one hour on a regular laptop.

Released: 29-Jan-2021 1:20 PM EST
Nuclear Physics from Rocks to Reactors
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Recent research on the neutron-proton (np) reaction could help us understand the age of the Earth and build less expensive nuclear power plants. The np reaction plays a role in potassium-argon dating and in the removal of neutrons from nuclear reactor cores, leading to core shutdown. In recent studies, nuclear scientists used a new neutron source to show that np reaction rates occur in ways very different from scientists’ initial expectations.

Released: 28-Jan-2021 4:30 PM EST
Stable Nickel-64 Nuclei Take Three Distinct Shapes
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Scientists have identified three distinct shapes in stable nickel-64 that appear as energy is added to the nucleus. The nucleus in the lowest-energy state is spherical, then takes elongated (prolate) and flattened (oblate) shapes as the protons and neutrons surrounding the nucleus gain energy. This demonstrates profound changes in the way protons and neutrons can arrange themselves.

Released: 25-Jan-2021 11:55 AM EST
CUORE Experiment Advances Search for a Rare Nuclear Decay
Department of Energy, Office of Science

One of the greatest mysteries in the universe is why the matter and anti-matter from the Big Bang did not all annihilate into pure energy. One scenario suggests a hypothetical, extremely rare nuclear decay where an atomic nucleus decays by emitting two electrons, creating additional matter. This paper reports on recent progress on related experiments.

Released: 25-Jan-2021 8:55 AM EST
RHIC Run 21: Pushing the Limits at the Lowest Collision Energy
Brookhaven National Laboratory

Accelerator physicists are preparing the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a DOE Office of Science user facility for nuclear physics research at DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, for its 21st year of experiments, set to begin on or about February 3, 2021. Instead of producing high-energy particle smashups, the goal for this run is to maximize collision rates at the lowest energy ever achieved at RHIC.

Released: 13-Jan-2021 7:55 AM EST
Two Berkeley Lab Scientists Honored with the Lawrence Award
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

The Department of Energy has announced that Susannah Tringe and Dan Kasen, two scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), will receive the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award, one of DOE’s highest honors. Additionally, former Berkeley Lab scientist M. Zahid Hasan was also named as one of the eight recipients.

Released: 11-Jan-2021 4:00 PM EST
Jefferson Lab Launches Virtual AI Winter School for Physicists
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

Artificial intelligence is a game-changer in nuclear physics, able to enhance and accelerate fundamental research and analysis by orders of magnitude. DOE's Jefferson Lab is exploring the expanding synergy between nuclear physics and computer science as it co-hosts together with The Catholic University of America and the University of Maryland a virtual weeklong series of lectures and hands-on exercises Jan. 11-15 for graduate students, postdoctoral researchers and even “absolute beginners.”

Released: 11-Jan-2021 2:45 PM EST
Experimental, theoretical physicists can now apply for Rosen Scholar Fellowship to work at Los Alamos Neutron Science Center
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Experimental and theoretical scientists seeking an opportunity to pursue research in neutron scattering, dynamic materials, isotope production, and both applied and basic research in nuclear physics at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) can apply to the Rosen Scholar Fellowship.

Released: 8-Jan-2021 10:45 AM EST
Brookhaven Intern Caroline Sears Analyzes Nuclear Fission Yields
Brookhaven National Laboratory

The Smith College undergraduate is analyzing data relevant to nuclear reactor science.

Released: 6-Jan-2021 11:10 AM EST
First-Person Science: Kawtar Hafidi on the Proton’s Structure
Department of Energy, Office of Science

When Kawtar Hafidi first started researching the structure of the proton, other scientists told her the project she proposed was impossible. Now she and the scientists she’s trained are pursuing the next generation of that “impossible” experiment.

Released: 6-Jan-2021 9:45 AM EST
Brookhaven Lab's Top-10 Stories of 2020
Brookhaven National Laboratory

With all the remarkable changes and challenges that took place in 2020, the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory had a banner year in science.

Released: 5-Jan-2021 9:55 AM EST
Machine Learning Improves Particle Accelerator Diagnostics
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

Operators of Jefferson Lab's primary particle accelerator are getting a new tool to help them quickly address issues that can prevent it from running smoothly. The machine learning system has passed its first two-week test, correctly identifying glitchy accelerator components and the type of glitches they’re experiencing in near-real-time. An analysis of the results of the first field test of the custom-built machine learning system was recently published in the journal Physical Review Accelerators and Beams.

Released: 4-Jan-2021 11:20 AM EST
Experiment to Precisely Measure Electrons Moves Forward
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

The MOLLER experiment at DOE’s Jefferson Lab is one step closer to carrying out an experiment to gain new insight into the forces at work inside the heart of matter through probes of the humble electron. The experiment has just received a designation of Critical Decision 1, or CD-1, from the DOE, which is a greenlight to move forward in design and prototyping of equipment.

Released: 21-Dec-2020 9:50 AM EST
Ettringite Cements Its Potential
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Ettringite, a mineral found in cement, can latch on to and detain the wily and worrisome radioactive contaminant, pertechnetate.

Released: 14-Dec-2020 10:30 AM EST
Righting a wrong, nuclear physicists improve precision of neutrino studies
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Led by the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a new study clears up a discrepancy regarding the biggest contributor of unwanted background signals in specialized detectors of neutrinos.

Released: 8-Dec-2020 10:55 AM EST
Sandia hosts Education With Industry officer
Sandia National Laboratories

With the resiliency and determination that earned her the U.S. Air Force call sign “Fenix,” Capt. Justine Wolff is using her position as an Education With Industry student at Sandia National Laboratories.

   
Released: 1-Dec-2020 10:45 AM EST
American Vacuum Society Honors Jefferson Lab Accelerator Scientist
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

Some of the most advanced work to enable research at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility is focused on ensuring that nothing gets in the way of the electron beam produced for nuclear physics experiments. Now, one Jefferson Lab staff scientist is being honored for her work on producing ultra-high to extreme-high vacuum environments to do just that.



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