- Research School of Physical Sciences and Engineering
The Research School of Physical Sciences and Engineering (RSPhysSE) was established with the creation of the
Australian National University (ANU) in1947 . Located at the ANU's main campus inCanberra , the school is one of the four founding research schools in the ANU'sInstitute of Advanced Studies .As part of the Institute of Advanced Studies it is primarily a research school with limited interaction with the ANU's undergraduate students. With a total of around 200 employees the school has approximately 60 PhD students and 70 academic staff. The school is divided into separate research departments although PhD students can often be based in more than one department.cite web
title =RSPyhsSE webpage
publisher =Australian National University
url =http://www.rsphysse.anu.edu.au
accessdate =2007-02-02 ]Research
RSPhysSE is one of the leading physics research institutions in Australia. Major research facilities at the school include the
14UD NEC Pelletron accelerator and associated modularsuperconducting linac run by the Department of Nuclear Physics, theH-1NF flexibleStellarator Heliac run by the Plasma Research Laboratory plus an extensive range of smaller experimental and computational equipment. Research ranges from the fundamental to the applied, including both experimental and theoretical work. The school's primary research areas are: materials science and engineering; lasers, nonlinear optics and photonics; nanotechnology and mesoscopic physics; physics of atoms, molecules and the nucleus; plasma physics and surface science; physics and the environment.The nuclear physics 14UD is one of a handful of large
Van de Graaff accelerators in the world. It was the largest machine of its type when installed in1974 . After many upgrades the 14UD is capable of running terminal voltage of up 16.7 MV. Charging is via three inductive charging chains. In 1996 a superconducting RF linac was installed that is used as an energy booster for the 14UD enabling higher energies to be reached. [cite web
title =Accelerators in the Department
publisher =Australian National University
url =http://wwwrsphysse.anu.edu.au/nuclear/accelerators.php
accessdate =2007-02-02 ]History
Sir Mark Oliphant was the founder of the School and its first Director from
1950 to1963 . The school was originally called the "Research School of Physical Sciences" with "Engineering" being added to its title in1990 to highlight the large amount of engineering work that is undertaken in the school.For much of the early years the focus of a large part of the school was designing, re-designing and building a cyclo-synchrotron that in its final intended form was to produce a beam of 10.6
GeV protons for nuclear physics research. Designed to be a world class research machine it was referred to within the school as "The Big Machine". Due to shifting goalposts and huge costs the cyclo-syncrotron was never completed. The small 7.7MeV cyclotron designed to function as the proton injector was completed in1955 , and the largehomopolar generator intended to power the system was first operated in1962 , but by this time work on "The Big Machine" itself had been abandoned.The homopolar generator, the largest ever built, was capable of supplying currents of over 2
megaampere s. Even though it was never used for its intended purpose it ended up being used for numerous research projects requiring an extremely high current source until its disassembly in1986 . One of these projects was the invention and development of therailgun by John Barber and Richard Marshall. [Marshall, Richard (2001). "Railgunnery: Where Have We Been? Where Are We Going?". "IEEE Transactions on Magnetics", 37 (1), 440-444.] The school also benefited in an indirect way from the construction of the massive generator, the accumulated engineering experience and techniques where later used to build other research equipment around the school including the Plasma Physics H1NF Heliac. some parts of the homopolar generator are now on permanent display on the lawn outside the research school.The school has been home to many different particle accelerators over the years. The first accelerator installed was a 1.25 MV Cockcroft-Walton known as HT1, this was in use from
1952 until1967 when it was sold to theUniversity of New South Wales . A second smaller 600 kV Cockcroft-Walton machine (HT2) was assembled in house using many spare parts acquired for HT1. In1955 the UK government supplied a 33 MeV electron synchrotron as a gift. It was moved to theUniversity of Western Australia in1961 . During1960 -1980 a HVEC EN tandem accelerator was used by nuclear physics for light ion research.1975 saw the school's 14UD accelerator come online, which has since been augmented with asuperconducting linear accelerator .On
July 5 1960 a fire during the night destroyed much of the eastern end of the Cockcroft Building. The damage included the drawing office, many student's and staff's results and files and the control room for the 600 kV Cockcroft-Walton accelerator. The 600 kV accelerator though only water damaged had to be scrapped. Refurbishment of the burnt out area was completed in September1961 .Early departments that have now been spun off into research schools of their own include the departments of "Astronomy" and "Geophysics and Geochemistry". Geophysics and Geochemistry separated into the Research School of Earth Sciences in
1973 .Mount Stromlo Observatory became part of the Department of Astronomy in1957 . While part of the school, the Department of Astronomy developedSiding Spring Observatory and installed many newtelescope s atMount Stromlo Observatory . It separated into the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics in1986 . [cite book
last =Ophel
first =Trevor
coauthors =Jenkin, John
title =Fire in the belly : the first 50 years of the pioneer school at the ANU
publisher =Research School of Physical Sciences and Engineering, Australian National University
date =1996
location =Canberra
pages =157
url =http://wwwrsphysse.anu.edu.au/admin/php/history.php
id =ISBN 0-85800-048-2 ]tructure
Departments
*Applied Mathematics
*Atomic and Molecular Physics Laboratories
*Electronic Materials Engineering
*Laser Physics Centre
*Nuclear Physics
*Plasma Physics
*Nonlinear Physics Centre
*Optical Sciences Group
*Theoretical PhysicsCentres and Networks
*The Australian Photonics Cooperative Research Centre
*The Centre for Complex Systems
*CRC for Functional Communications Surfaces
*The Centre for the Mind
*ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum-Atom Optics
*Australian Research Network for Advanced Materials
*ARC Complex Open Systems Research Network
*Australian Research Council Nanotechnology Network
*The Centre for Antimatter-Matter StudiesDeans and Directors
*Sir Mark Oliphant
1950 -1963
*John Jeager 1964 -1965
*Sir Ernest Titterton1966 -1973
*Robert Street 1974 -1978
*John Carver1978 -1992
*Erich Weigold 1992 -2002
*Jim Williams2002 -presentReferences
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.