This award will provide partial support for junior physicists to participate in the second International Conference on Technology and Instrumentation in Particle Physics (TIPP), which will take place June 9 - 14, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois. This is a new series of international conferences in the field of particle physics sponsored by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP). It was instituted because of an observed need to develop new transformational technologies for the field of high energy physics and the observed trend of an erosion of knowledge in the area of particle detector technology and instrumentation in general, especially under the younger generations. The conference focuses on all areas of detector development and instrumentation in particle physics and aims to foster and encourage worldwide cooperation and communication in those fields. One day will be set aside for short courses for graduate students and junior post-docs. Attendance by junior members of the community is a priority for this meeting. Requests for financial support will be solicited from young scientists throughout the United States. The local organizing committee will evaluate all requests. Awards will be granted respecting diversity, appropriateness of proposed presentation (oral or poster) and minority status of the applicant.

Project Report

The second International Conference on Technology and Instrumentation in Particle Physics (TIPP) was held from June 9 to June 14, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois. The goal of the conference was to provide a truly international forum for discussion and presentation of detector development and instrumentation in the field of particle physics and closely associated disciplines. The conference provided a wider scope than the existing conferences for young researchers to interact in person with experts in the field and to become known to the community. An important goal of this conference was to attract members of the younger generation of scientist to pursue the development of new technologies. Following the mandate of IUPAP, the emphasis of the conference was on technology and instrumentation for particle physics. Given the growing synergies between particle physics, particle astrophysics and photon science contributions on technology and instrumentation from closely related disciplines were included. The conference had 483 participants and tried to include as many young scientists as possible and engage them in the ongoing work on the development of new instrumentation for particle physics. To accomplish this, three topical lecture courses were made an integral part of the conference, scientific secretaries were recruited from the pool of graduate students and an active social program with close interaction between vendors, senior scientists and junior scientists was established. The conference had fourteen scientific secretaries recruited from graduate students and recent post-docs, mainly from Fermilab. The secretaries were: Camacho, Enrique (CINVESTAV) Green, Jessica (Purdue University) Joglekar, Aniket (Univ. of Chicago) Ketchum, Wesley (Univ. of Chicago) Lanza, Robert (Univ. of Chicago) Li, Ho Ling (University of Chicago) Liu, Qiuguang (Purdue University) Lu, Ying (University of Maryland) Orduna, Jesus (Rice University) Prewitt, Michelle (Rice University) Pupillo, Francesco Tang, Jian (University of Chicago) Wu, Min (Purdue University) Zheng, Yu (Purdue University) Captain of the scientific secretaries was Michelle Prewitt, graduate student from Rice University on the Dzero experiment. She did a great job coaching and mentoring the students for the plenary and parallel sessions. Those secretaries who had requested financial support were supported from the NSF funds. Three short courses were given during the conference for younger physicists. The course on Silicon Detectors was given by Dr. Carl Haber from LBNL and was attended by 75 junior participants; the course on Electronics for Particle Physics was given by Dr. Gary Drake from Argonne National Laboratory and was attended by 115 participants. The course on Neutrino Detectors was given by Dr. Mayly Sanchez from the University of Iowa and was attended by 66 participants. The regular registration fee for the conference was $550. The registration fee was waived for students in need of financial support who met the selection criteria. The student had to submit an abstract for either an oral or poster presentation and a recommendation letter from the advisor was required. A total of 66 students applied for support. Nine students cancelled their request. These students were located in India, Hungary, Switzerland, Iran, Pakistan, Brazil, Romania, South Africa and China. The request for support from the remaining 57 students was considered and 41 requests were granted. Requests were declined because no letter of recommendation was received or because the topic was outside the scope of the conference. All other awards were granted respecting diversity, appropriateness of proposed presentation (oral or poster) and minority status of the applicant. A total of 37 students attended with support. Of the students who were declined financial support, 14 did attend the conference paid for using their own funds. Of the 41 students that were supported seven were female and all attended the conference. The full list of US students that were supported is: Abramovitch, Joshua; Southern Methodist University (jabramovit@smu.edu) Aefsky, Scott; Brandeis University (aefskysa@brandeis.edu) Bilki, Burak; University of Iowa (burak-bilki@uiowa.edu) Bradley, Adam; Case Western Reserve University (awbradley@case.edu) Chapman, Jeremy; Brown University (jeremy_chapman@brown.edu) Cooney, Michael; University of Hawaii (cooneym@hawaii.edu) Faham, Carlos; Brown University (carlos@brown.edu ) Goetzke, Luke; Columbia University (lukeg@phys.columbia.edu) Howley, Ian; The University of Texas, Arlington (ihowley@uta.edu) Ignarra, Christina; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (ignarra@mit.edu) Joglekar, Aniket; University of Chicago (aniket.joglekar88@gmail.com) Johansen, Jacob; University of Chicago (jacobjjohansen@gmail.com) Ketchum, Wesley; University of Chicago (wketchum@uchicago.edu) Lamichhane, Pramod; Wayne State University (dz3990@wayne.edu) Lanza, Robert; University of Chicago (bobbylanza@gmail.com) Lopez, Jeremy; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (jplopez@mit.edu) Lu, Ying; University of Maryland, College Park (ylu12345@umd.edu) Prewitt, Michelle; Rice University (mprewitt@rice.edu) The total amount of US student support was $9900. The total NSF contribution was used for US student support. The remaining support came from IUPAP and DOE funds. All supported students gave an oral presentation except for Mr. Abramovitch, who gave a poster presentation. The proceedings from the conference are published in Physics Procedia by Elsevier, available at http://ees.elsevier.com/tipp11/.

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Physics (PHY)
Type
Standard Grant (Standard)
Application #
1066306
Program Officer
Randy Ruchti
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2011-04-01
Budget End
2012-03-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$5,500
Indirect Cost
Name
Fermi Research Alliance, LLC
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Batavia
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60510