present and future program for particle astrophysics and cosmology

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July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 1 Present and Future Program for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology R. Blandford KIPAC Director, PPA Assistant Director for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

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Present and Future Program for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology. R. Blandford KIPAC Director, PPA Assistant Director for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology. [KI]PAC: Overview. Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (2003) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 1

Present and Future Program for Particle Astrophysics and

Cosmology

R. Blandford

KIPAC Director,

PPA Assistant Director for

Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

Page 2: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 2

[KI]PAC: Overview

* Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (2003)* Particle Phys.+Astro; DOE+NASA, NSF…; SLAC+Campus…* Computation, Experiment, Observation, Theory

– KIPAC Strategic Plan April 2008

* PAC: (~$19M/81FTE + ~$2M/10FTE DPS. cf ~$101M/352FTE, PPA): – GLAST (~$4+6M/14+29FTE), LSST (~$3M/9FTE), SNAP(~$1M/4FTE)– Physics/Theory/Other (~$5M/25FTE)

* Partnership– Campus: Research, salaries, buildings – Agencies: NASA, NSF… on projects, grants…– Fred Kavli (Foundation) $7.5M FKB– Kavli-Hewlett +… Endowment ->$20M over 10 years

* Scientifically productive– 260 published papers in 2007 by KIPAC members on KIPAC topics – ~160 on DOE-related topics– Several high impact - citations, press releases etc

Page 3: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 3

Overview of Financial Data – FY2008

FY 2008 FTE by Job CategoryKIPAC Division

Permanent PhD, 22.9

Temporary PhD, 11.6

Graduate Students, 9.5

Engineer / Computing

Professional, 34.9

Other, 1.7Administrative / Technician,

10.0

Total FTE: 83.3

FY 2008 Total M$ by ProgramKIPAC Division

GLAST Science, 6.0

KIPAC Theory, 3.0

Non Accel Science, 2.1

LSST, 3.2

SNAP, 1.2

Allocation of PPA DPS, 2.2

GLAST ISOC, 3.7

Total M$ of KIPAC: 19.2

Page 4: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 4

Overview of Financial Data 2007-2010

FY 2007-2010 Total M$ by Cost TypeKIPAC Division

-

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

25.0

30.0

FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10

(

M$)

Labor M&S Allocation of PPA DPS

FY 2007-2010 Total M$ by ProgramKIPAC Division

-

5.0

10.0

15.0

20.0

25.0

30.0

FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10

(

M$)

GLAST ISOC GLAST Science KIPAC TheoryNon Accel Science LSST SNAPAllocation of PPA DPS

Page 5: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 5

Non-DOE Support

* Non-SLAC, DOE support to KIPAC members (CDMS, EXO) - ~$2.5M* Non-SLAC, non-DOE support to KIPAC members

– SDO, GLAST, LIGO, EXO… - ~$40M (2007)– NeXT, IRIS in recent SMEX (NASA)– Grants - ~$3M– ~11/20 postdocs, ~16/30 students

* Campus support– Half teaching faculty salary, ~1 postdoc, ~8/30 student GTA, administration– Start up, Enterprise fund, Bridging

* Private support – FKB ($11M), PAB (~$30M), Schwob (~$1M)– Kavli-Hewlett endowment (->$15-20M over 10 years)

• First two Kavli Fellows advertised this summer

– Simonyi ($20M), Gates ($10M), Schmidt ($1.5M), Keck($1.5M) for LSST– Agilent support of CMB research– Computational hardware (multiple)

Page 6: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 6

P5 Report to HEPAP

* Cosmic Frontier Recommendations– Support for the study of dark matter and dark

energy as an integral part of the US particle physics program.

– DOE support the space-based Joint Dark Energy Mission, in collaboration with NASA, at an appropriate level negotiated with NASA.

– DOE support for the ground-based Large Synoptic Survey Telescope program in coordination with NSF at a level that depends on the overall program budget.

– Joint NSF and DOE support for direct dark matter search experiments.

– Limited R&D funding for other particle astrophysics projects and recommends establishing a Particle Astrophysics Science Advisory Group.

Page 7: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 7

Non-Accelerator Program

* GLAST* LSST* SNAP* GLAST Physics* Non-Accelerator Physics* R&D

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Page 8: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 8

GLAST: Overview

* GeV Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope– Successor to EGRET telescope on CGRO- ~109 photons from ~104 high energy cosmic sources over ~10 yr.- Seek dark matter annihilation signal– Stanford leads Large Area Telescope - major instrument– Original design by Atwood (1993) – Successful inter-agency, international collaboration– Project cost $690M [$90M foreign contribution, $45M DOE]– NASA will contribute $25M MO&DA

* June 11 launch; uniformly nominal performance– “Nominal” operation so far– Efficient cosmic ray (104/) removal– Observing already– First light release Early August

* Instrument Science Operations Center (ISOC) @ SLAC– ~$4M/14 FTE

Simulated LAT (>1 GeV, 1 yr)

Page 9: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 9

LSST: Overview

* Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (orig. DMT 1995) * Dark matter/energy using weak gravitational lensing

– Test of FCDM is now an issue of physics– Supernovae, BAO, strong lensing, ancillary science

* NSF-DOE-Private Collaboration– SLAC $3M/9FTE– Simonyi-Gates $30M, Schmidt $1.5M, Keck $1.5M

* Mirror cast; grinding begins in August– Site selection in Chile

* SLAC leads the (3 GPx) camera collaboration;16 institutions* SLAC also working on database (~100PB)

– Discussions with ASCR, industry, private

* NSF CoDR(2007); NSF PDR + DOE CD1 2009?, ASTRO2010* First light 2016

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Page 10: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 10

SNAP: Overview

* Proposed following discovery of acceleration of universe ten years ago

* LBL (Perlmutter et al) is lead institution– SLAC an early collaborator

* Originally a SuperNova Acceleration Probe; now a broader suite of ways to measure dark energy

* SLAC role– Electronics (Haller - core competency in space electronics)– Star Guider/image sensor (Roodman) – Strong Gravitational Lensing (RB et al)

* Awaiting JDEM downselect (2009), 2017 launch* DOE ~$1M/4FTE

Page 11: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 11

Non-Accelerator Physics

* GLAST Physics– Strongly linked to ISOC, campus

GLAST/NASA program

– GLAST data analysis and service role

– Scientific thrusts• Dark matter/new physics, relativistic

outflows, particle acceleration

– Strong postdoc/student program

– ~6M DOE budget, ~29 FTE

* KIPAC Physics– Joint with campus; overlap with theory

– Phenomenological research• LSST, SNAP, DES, X-ray astronomy

– Strong postdoc/student program

– ~$3M/13FTE(2009)

Page 12: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 12

Detector Development

* TeV Astrophysics. – Air Cerenkov telescopes ~ 0.1-10TeV, ~ 100 sources

• H.E.S.S., MAGIC, crucial to GLAST

– Future projects AGIS (ACT)• Advanced Si-based photodetectors, secondary optics

* CMB astrophysics– Strong NSF-supported experimental program

• Interferometry and bolometry • Serious interest from SLAC/RF group• Data management

* X-ray astrophysics– Role in NASA, JAXA-supported NeXT(2013) mission

• Lead construction of Soft Gamma Detector as Work for Others• Science role in NuSTAR (2011)

Page 13: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 13

Theory

* Abel, Blandford, Wechsler groups– Includes non-theory work – Excludes theory by others

• Non-accelerator physics

* Joint seminars with Th. Phys.

Page 14: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 14

Theory: Overview

* High relevance to DOE Projects and Proposals– Cosmology: dark matter,energy, lensing, structure formation, clusters …– Particle astrophysics: black holes, jets, GRB, Magnetars, SNR…

* Support of GLAST, LSST, SNAP, DES, CDMS…* Excellent postdocs, students (~$2M/10FTE, 2009…)* Collaboration with non-accelerator physics, theoretical physics* Strong emphasis on computational astrophysics* Supported by NSF, NASA … grants* 270 papers over past three years* DOE theory review July 23

Page 15: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 15

Computational Physics

* Data handling– LSST - 3GPx @ 30-100mHz -> 100PB– Archive, disseminate, mine

* Large scale simulation– AMR - MPI codes

• Dark matter simulations, galaxies, stars…

– PIC codes

* Visualization– Interactive system on high

performance graphics hardware– Stereo and tiled display walls– GPUs

Page 16: Present and Future Program for          Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology

July 7, 2008 SLAC Annual Program Review Page 16

Summary

* KIPAC@5 – Succesful partnership: Campus-SLAC, DOE-NASA-NSF, Physics-Astrophysics– Scientifically productive

* GLAST – Highly successful implementation of HEP techniques and methodology– DOE in space; working collaboration with NASA– GLAST Physics ready to start working on data

* LSST– Strong collaboration: mirror cast; camera on track– Awaiting PDR/CD1, ASTRO2010

* SNAP – Modest but key role; could expand– Awaiting JDEM downselect

* Detector development – Mostly non-DOE projects and support but tapping DOE expertise

* Non-accelerator Physics and Theory– High impact program strongly integrated with projects and proposals– Computationally intensive