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Blacksburg Workshop

Bernard Sadoulet Dept. of Physics /LBNL UC Berkeley UC Institute for Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (INPAC). Blacksburg Workshop. DUSEL process Solicitation 1 Workshops: Berkeley, Blacksburg , Boulder, Maryland(?) Goals Style. DUSEL Process.

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Blacksburg Workshop

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  1. Bernard Sadoulet Dept. of Physics /LBNL UC Berkeley UC Institute for Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (INPAC) Blacksburg Workshop DUSEL process Solicitation 1 Workshops: Berkeley, Blacksburg, Boulder, Maryland(?) Goals Style

  2. DUSEL Process • Solicitation 1: Community wide study of • • Scientific roadmap: from Nuclear/Particle/Astro Physics to Geo Physics/Chemistry/Microbiology/Engineering • • Generic infrastructure requirements • • Proposal supported by all 8 known sites submitted on Sept 15,2004 (www.dusel.org) • Under review by NSF • Solicitation 2 : Preselection of 3-5 sites • • Proposals due January 10. • Solicitation 3 • Selection of initial site(s) • MRE and Presidential Budget (hope 08 start)

  3. Solicitation 1 Organization • 6 PI’s responsible for the study • in particular scientific quality/ objectivity • 14 working groups + Workshops • Infrastructure requirements/management • Education and outreach • 2 consultation groups • • The site consultation group (Solicitation 2 sites) • Endorsement of the PI’s and general approach • Input on scientific/technical questions important to the sites • Competition between sites • • The initiative coordination group: major stakeholders (e.g. National Labs) • Coordination with other major initiatives • Competition between these initiatives • Report directed at OMB/OSTP/Congress cf. Quantum Universe +Web based reports with technical facts External review à la NRC

  4. Workshops • Berkeley Aug 4-7 • Agree about methodology and finalize Solicitation 1 proposal • First exploration of scientific themes • Start of work on infrastructure requirements • Common language for solicitation 2 • Blacksburg Nov 12-13 • Focus on Earth Sciences (including Geo-microbiology) and Applications • More precise definition of scientific roadmaps and generic experiments • Generic infrastructure requirements: Adaptation of methodology • Help in integration into solicitation 2 proposals • Boulder Jan 5-7 • Bring in “mainstream” biologists (e.g. evolutionary molecular and microbe) • Synergies between fields • Focus on infrastructure requirements <= results of working groups Modules • Sketch of report: major themes • Last opportunity to adjust our common language before Solicitation 2 • Washington Area: March or April • Conclusions • First draft of report

  5. Berkeley Workshop: Physics/Earth Science • Clearly something is happening • Partnership • Not only to boost political case • Money saving/new opportunities from co-location • e.g. Deep module as platform • Instrumentation of the site before construction and monitoring after • biological precautions • Synergies • Technology MEMS, Data acquisition • Large caverns • Novel scientific methods • use of particle methods for earth exploration (neutrinos, low radioactivity counting) • use of geophysics methods for particle detection? • Different styles • novel approaches • more effective argumentation with agencies • Intellectual climate at site(s) • Multidisciplinary=> intellectual creativity • education of our students • education and outreach

  6. Berkeley Workshop:The Big Scientific Question • Illuminating the dark side of the earth and the cosmos • Nature of dark matter and dark energy • The neutrino properties • Matter/antimatter asymmetry and stability of matter • Ancient life/evolution/adaptation • Understanding the earth and its evolution /rock deformation/ earthquakes • Imaging the underground world => mastery of the rock

  7. Berkeley Workshop:A Powerful Case for DUSEL • Unique aspects • Earth Science: Deep, long term is unique • Physics: Depth ? • Long base line + accelerators • Likely demand and evolution of science • We have to build the case • Road maps + Infrastructure requirements • Strategic importance • as large scale experiments become international , important to have US site to have US teams leading the projects • We want the U.S. to be a leader in geoscience techniques • Energy sciences (finding oil deposit, etc.) • Underground construction • Education of our scientists and engineers • Homeland security • International context and partnerships • SNO • Japan/Europe

  8. Blacksburg:Scientific Roadmapsfor Deep Underground Earth Science • Starting from previous studies (in particular Ness2002,Earth Lab report, Berkeley workshop) go further • Identification of major themes • With syntheses which make sense for the specialists, resonate with other scientists and fascinates the non scientists • Relatively few working groups: Coupled processes, rock mechanics and tectonics, geo-microbiology and applications • Prioritization • What are the most pressing questions to answer deep underground? • Can we identify major types of experiments or facilities • Not necessarily same approach as physicists • But go further than the “1km3 sand box” where we want to play for at least 10 years • e.g. Earth Lab • Ultradeep Life and Biogeochemistry Observatory • Deep Flow and Paleoclimate Laboratory and Observatory • Induced Fracture and Deformation Processes Laboratory Deep Coupled Processes Laboratory

  9. Blacksburg: Infrastructure Requirements • Earth science is not geology independent • Not everything can be done at every site • What are the generic site characteristics which are necessary to at least start to tackle the most important questions • cf Depth as a major characteristic for physicists (but not needed for all) • Do we have enough of a scientific case for recommending eventually a combination of sites? • Adapt infrastructure requirement matrix to Deep Earth Science (Lee Petersen, Derek Ellsworth) • At minimum, additional columns indicating rock type, fracture characteristics etc. • Define also needed characterization / monitoring of the site + precautions for biological studies • Estimate of the demand in an international context

  10. Berkeley Workshop: Physics/Earth Science • Clarity about differences • Earth scientists: heterogeneous fragmented • Physicists: homogeneous => large cavities • Earth scientists: more sites • Physicists: single organization • Earth scientists: virgin territory • Some physicists: use of existing sites • to reduce costs

  11. Style • Solicitation 1 process • Study cutting across sites: “ Site independent” (obviously not geology independent) • Program under PI’s responsibility • Visit of Kimballton is not an official part of the workshop • Stress our unity • A big success at Berkeley • In spite of the competition between sites (and natural tendency to push competitive advantage of our favorite site) • No product placement, propaganda • No bias of the scientific arguments for political purpose • Education and outreach should never be very far in the background

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