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issues and events
Quarks-to-Cosmos Report Calls for New Physics-Astronomy CollaborationsThe final result is Connecting Quarks with the Cosmos: Eleven Science Questions for the New Century, released by the NRC on 21 April 2002. The report was actually done in two phases, the first of which consisted of the 11 science questions referred to in the report's title, and was released in January 2001. Those questions, listed here, address what the report describes as "the universe at its two extremes--the very large and the very small":
After identifying the questions that intertwine physics and astronomy, the report committee turned to developing a plan for finding the answers. The plan is contained in the seven recommendations for research and research coordination that make up the recently completed phase two of the report. Those recommendations are as follows:
University of Chicago astrophysicist Michael Turner, who chaired the study, said the recommendations were not given in order of importance, but that the first three would involve significant new projects. The third recommendation, which calls for an underground lab, is the most politically sensitive because of controversy in Congress over siting such a lab in South Dakota's defunct Homestake Mine (see Physics Today, January 2001, page 23). The Homestake project is being used as a political prize in a heated and critical Republican Senate election challenge to Senator Tim Johnson (D-S. Dak.) by Representative John Thune (R-S. Dak.). To avoid the political fray, the NRC study talked about Homestake only as one of several possible sites for an underground lab. "We just looked at the science," said committee member John Huchra of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. "Our job was to lay down the scientific requirements for underground experiments." The NRC has a separate study nearing completion that looks at the underground lab issue in detail. The report does not discuss the cost of pursuing the recommendations, but Turner said his personal view is that much of the work could be done for about $1 billion. He and others involved in writing the report said they were careful to make sure the recommendations do not conflict with the 2001 decadal survey Astronomy and Astrophysics in the New Millennium, by the Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications. "There was worry at the beginning of the study that it might interfere with the decadal survey," Turner said. "We wanted to reinforce the survey, not interfere with it." Jim Dawson
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