davrosthedalek 5 hours ago

This is in preparation for starting construction work on the Electron-Ion-Collider (EIC) which will use the same tunnel and experiment locations.

  • gnufx 3 hours ago

    As I recall, RHIC itself replaced some cancelled project. I remember the tunnel being at least partly there in the mid-80s, with a plan to trundle ions from the tandem lab through a crazy long beamline across the site and stop nuclear structure research there as a result.

ephimetheus an hour ago

sPHENIX uses software that we’ve worked on at CERN to do some of their reconstruction!

tahoeskibum 3 hours ago

How time passes! I remember touring the RHIC tunnels back in 1999 when it was being made.

syntaxing 2 hours ago

I worked at BNL during college days through the SULI program! Some of my peers from college is working there full time now too. I got to work on some really cool stuff but unfortunately a lot of the tenured researcher I knew have seem to left. I heard a lot of researchers left during Trump’s first term.

webdevver 3 hours ago

as a layperson, it seems the whole collider stuff has not been a very fruitful scientific direction so far (has there been any discovery made with the help of a collider that found its way into an industrial product?)

maybe we are trying to 'jump' the tech tree too much - perhaps the first step was to create a much smarter entity than ourselves, and then letting it have a look at the collider data.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    > has there been any discovery made with the help of a collider that found its way into an industrial product?

    Yes. SLAC has an excellent public-lecture series that touches on industrial uses of particle colliders [1].

    If you want a concrete example, "four basic technologies have been developed to generate EUV light sources:" (1) synchrotron radiation, (2) discharge-produced plasma, (3) free-elecron lasers (FELs) and (4) laser-produced plasma [2]. Synchrotrons are circular colliders. FELs came out of linear colliders [3]. (China has them too [4].)

    We have modern semiconductors because we built colliders.

    [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_M6sjEYCE2I&list=PLFDBBAE492...

    [2] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S270947232...

    [3] https://lcls.slac.stanford.edu

    [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shanghai_Synchrotron_Radiation...

    • gnufx 2 hours ago

      In the context of the article "collider" means intersecting particle beams, like in RHIC and LHC, which obviously involves rather low probability interactions, as opposed to accelerators which slam a beam into a dense target (like the SLAC accelerator). In a synchrotron light source you want the beam to circulate and specifically not collide with anything; they were developed from particle physics accelerators, of course.

  • mgibbs63 2 hours ago

    I think there's a strong argument that the most useful product from collider science is the synchrotron light source. Researchers using collider rings realized that the x-ray synchrotron light these rings emit (an inconvenience to collider physics people) was a fantastic tool for structural biology and materials science. Eventually, they built dedicated electron storage rings that don't do collisions at all - the main goal is producing bright X-ray beams.

    Synchrotron light sources have had wide-ranging, concrete impacts on "industrial products" that you probably use every day via studies in: - Drug discovery (Tamiflu and Paxlovid are good examples) - Battery technology (X-ray studies of how/why batteries degrade over time has lead to better designs) - EUV photolithography techniques - Giant Magetoresistance (Important for high capacity spinning-disk hard drives)

  • GreyZephyr 3 hours ago

    The web would be one of the more well known technologies to come out of running collider experiments. More directly a whole lot of medical imaging including PET is only possible because of either isotopes manufactured through colliders or sensors developed in colliders.

  • magicalhippo 2 hours ago

    > has there been any discovery made with the help of a collider that found its way into an industrial product?

    Accelerators and colliders have had a profound impact on medical sciences. Nuclear isotopes used for nuclear medicine[1] is often produced by cyclotrons[2], the accelerator component of circular colliders. The detectors[3] used in things like PET scanners are based on detectors used in collision experiments[4]. Using protons to treat cancer was an idea that came directly from work on cyclotrons[5]. Using the tools developed to simulate how the collision fallout interact with the detectors at LHC[6] has been incorporated into radiotherapy to more accurately compute required doses[7][8].

    > perhaps the first step was to create a much smarter entity than ourselves, and then letting it have a look at the collider data

    We are actually data starved, we have lots of good ideas but no way to test them.

    [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_medicine#Sources_of_ra...

    [2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclotron

    [3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_camera

    [4]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scintigraphy#Process

    [5]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton_therapy#History

    [6]: https://kt.cern/technologies/geant4

    [7]: https://aapm.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/mp.17678

    [8]: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240542832...

  • juanjmanfredi 2 hours ago

    Particle physicists working on collider experiments were among the first people that needed to deal with large quantities of digitally stored data. As a result, advances in the particle and nuclear physics have fed advances in computing, and vice versa [0]. The World Wide Web was invented at CERN, the largest particle physics and accelerator laboratory in the world [1]. Another example more relevant to this post is when a few physicists developed a CouchDB-based solution to handle the large amounts of data generated by their RHIC and CERN experiments. They spun that out into Cloudant, which was one of the pioneers for DBaaS [2].

    [0] https://www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/the-coevolution-of-...

    [1] https://home.cern/science/computing/birth-web/short-history-...

    [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloudant

  • gnufx 3 hours ago

    Since when were industrial products the purpose? Why do you think my colleagues can't analyse LHC data and discover the Higgs particle? The article says RHIC was a considerable scientific success.

  • whatshisface 2 hours ago

    Colliders have been the source of almost everything we know about the fundamental nature of reality. That makes them a fruitful scientific direction.

    • mmooss an hour ago

      Very much yes: Knowledge is valuable itself. We're discovering the secrets of the universe.

      The owners of capital have created an amazing, self-serving ideology in the US (and elsehwere): If something doesn't help them make money, it's worthless. People seem to think that's part of the US - in the Declaration of Independence and Constitution.

      Even more amazing is that I hear scholars in non-profitable fields parrot those ideas. I think capitalism - and especially free markets - work well in many ways, but it's a means to an end, not a religion. Capitalism serves us, not vice-versa.

  • Keyframe 3 hours ago

    this particular collider or particle accelerators in general? Cyclotrons are rather useful, for example.

  • atoav 3 hours ago

    Yeah, one of them is used by you right now. The Internet.

  • AIorNot 3 hours ago

    I hate to be harsh but this mentality is part of the decline of this country

    (that is so evident with loss of manufacturing, open and free science and tech robber barons oligarchs that have taken over our national discourse)

    Brookhaven was instrumental to Nobel winning discoveries and Stony Brook was a great science minded university

    I’m not opposed to investing in AI but its not a zero sum game and we are not a country of data centers alone

    • Insanity 3 hours ago

      Nit: saying “this country” without context on where the parent poster is from or where you are from is kinda useless.

      From context, you probably mean USA. And I’d agree, however the US was always more technology minded than scientifically minded, and the parent poster lines up with that centuries old ideology. So I don’t think this is per se a new thing.

    • pfdietz 3 hours ago

      At some point physics entitlement has to end -- why not here? We can't just keep scaling up the size and cost of fundamental physics experiments. Eventually the cost becomes so large that platitudinous arguments for them don't work.

      • mmooss an hour ago

        How can you look at current and recent US science and call it 'entitlement'? Have there been larger cuts anywhere in modern history?

        • pfdietz an hour ago

          If you think you are entitled to any amount larger than zero, you are showing entitlement.

          • MSFT_Edging an hour ago

            It's not an entitlement if you're paying into the tax base.

            I'm somehow entitled to others receiving corporate bailouts, entitled to massive military waste spending, and entitled to seeing the "victims" of Havana Syndrome receiving free healthcare for life.

            Yet I am not entitled to this money going towards research for the greater good of humanity?

      • Izikiel43 2 hours ago

        It's not a question of "can", it's a question of "should". No one knows what discoveries can happen and what the spillover from them could be in the future. In essence, it's a bet, a moonshot.

      • micromacrofoot 3 hours ago

        We absolutely can, and I reckon we will... this is like a fraction of a percent of science funding which is a fraction of a percent of GDP, we spend more on maintaining warheads we can't use

        10% of the US military budget for one year could build a 100km collider, RHIC is 4km

        • pfdietz 3 hours ago

          What a nonsense argument. Spending like this has to be justified on its own merits, not because there is some other bad spending. The argument you are trying to make would justify spending on almost anything.

          • micromacrofoot 3 hours ago

            The point is that there's so much bad spending that by comparison this is practically nothing to shake a stick at, and it produces actual science.

            • pfdietz 3 hours ago

              Repeating a bad argument doesn't transmute it into a good argument. I already explained why your argument is invalid. Please reconsider your dogmatic and irrational support for this kind of spending.

              • SiempreViernes 2 hours ago

                No, you just asserted that you think existing arguments are invalid, then accused a person who disregarded your assertion of being "dogmatic".

  • pfdietz 3 hours ago

    Look at it this way: they are investigating phenomena that require a collider-sized object to see. So unless your application involves a collider sized object, it won't use any effect they discover.

    The problem is that fundamental physics has moved too far beyond the scales where we operate.

    • tehnub 2 hours ago

      I don't think that argument holds up. See quantum mechanics.

      • pfdietz an hour ago

        Quantum mechanics is demonstrable on a lab bench (or smaller), so your counterargument is completely wrong.

        Any useful consequence of a physical effect is, in effect, an experiment that could test that effect. So if the smallest test is with a machine the size of a small country, no device using the effect can be smaller.

    • mmooss an hour ago

      You're in an IT forum and can't imagine implementations of both the smallest and largest scales? ICs are built at nanoscale and have to deal with quantum effects. PNT systems are so large that they have to deal with the speed of light and relativistic effects.

      Many things humanity builds are on the scale of colliders.

      > The problem is that fundamental physics

      I didn't know there was a problem. It seems like one of humanity's greatest successes.

buildsjets 2 hours ago

[flagged]

  • wildzzz 2 hours ago

    Probably a third hand story at this point but what I was told from someone that worked there for a long time is that at one point, the winch that raised the cesium source got jammed in the up position. Obviously this was a problem because no one could approach it. They brought in a marksman who somehow shot the winch or rope or whatever which dropped the source back into it's pig.

    I will say that this experiment only exposed the plot of land to radiation, not contaminated it. Unless the source was broken or eroded, there would be no detectable radiation on that land once the source is sealed up.

    That's not to say BNL hasn't contaminated the land, it is a Superfund site. They do a lot of medical experiments there (they invented the PET scan) but medical waste hasn't always been disposed of properly like now. They had "glass holes", a hole in the ground where you'd chuck in your contaminated labware.

  • JumpCrisscross 41 minutes ago

    > the supergeniuses at Brookhaven National Labs decided it would be a good thing

    Doing this next to an aquifer was reckless. But doing it at all is just science.

    > I grew up on Long Island and I expect that it will eventually kill me

    Wouldn't we expect to have solid data on this by now?

    Also, "Caesium-137 has a half-life of about 30.04 years" [1]. Only 22% of the original sample is still Cs-137. (The rest is mostly naturally-occuring barium.)

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesium-137

    • syntaxing 30 minutes ago

      Not OP but I doubt it. I’m in my mid 30s and when I grew up there in the 90s, Suffolk county was bumble. Some people had horses on their land. After 9/11, a ton of people moved in from the city and the population absolutely ballooned. Over two decades, the population grew so much that just Nassau county and Suffolk county combined has more people than a handful of states. People come and go too (including myself) so unless some organization is tracking us, it’ll be hard to pinpoint.

  • syntaxing 33 minutes ago

    Aha likewise, I swear, between the ticks and the polluted water, a good amount of us are screwed. Grumman has put some nasty stuff into the ground too. I remember growing up how they mentioned it was slowly seeping into the aquifer. Took me ages to convince my parents to get a RO machine

  • gnufx 2 hours ago

    You imply that experiment contaminated drinking, and other, water. How? Are you saying the Cs¹³⁷ leaked, and at concentration above that from fallout, say? Its γ-rays don't activate materials — I've used enough of them.

  • jiggawatts 2 hours ago

    It may help alleviate your concerns somewhat to know that these scientists weren’t completely irresponsible: Cesium 137 is a gamma emitter, which means that it doesn’t make things around it radioactive (unlike most fissionable elements such as Uranium or Plutonium).

    This was mentioned in one of the articles you linked!

    • buildsjets an hour ago

      And you are proposing that none of the Cesium 137 escaped into the ambient environment during the 19 year exposure period? That is statistically impossible. The source had ha mechanical shutter that allowed it to be directly exposed to the environment for almost 20 years, with no human to maintain it. Corrosion, spalling, and release of radioactive material though freeze-thaw cycles are all ways that bits of the source can become liberated.

      Are you also proposing that this was the only experiment that released radionuclides into the environment at BNL? I certainly remember the furor of them getting caught pissing tritium into the groundwater. I am sure there are many, many things they did which were not detected.

      https://www.gao.gov/products/rced-98-26

      It is well know and well documented that the defense industry has taken a cavalier approach to public nuclear safety from it’s very inception. And make no mistake, BNL exists primarily as a national defense asset.