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“The Cockcroft Institute looks forward with 2020 Vision”

ALICE & LasersFollowing a successful peer review and subsequent competitive national and global assessment in early 2009 by an international group of experts, the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) UK has authorized the Cockcroft Institute Core Grant for renewal and extension till March 31, 2017. This will see the Cockcroft Institute awarded £20.0 M since its founding in 2004, £16.3 M of which over the next eight years till 2017.

The Cockcroft Institute (CI) is an international centre of accelerator science and technology located adjacent to the Daresbury Science and Innovation Campus in Cheshire, UK. It is a partnership of the Universities of Liverpool, Manchester and Lancaster, STFC and the North West regional Development Agency (NWDA). Its vision is the advancement of fundamental science by means of cutting-edge research and development in the acceleration, manipulation, and delivery of beams of energetic sub-atomic particles and their associated radiation. It is to provide stewardship of the UK’s deliverables to national and international accelerator projects.  The institute sets a new international paradigm of collaborative research and is an innovative global exemplar in integrating academia, national research facilities, industry and local economy under one umbrella.

The STFC award comes with a welcome long term vision, enabling the Cockcroft Institute to advance discovery class science to at least 2020. It will empower the Institute to maintain and enhance its on-going fundamental research and development in particle and photon beam science and technology; to develop innovative concepts, designs and prototypes for the next generation of accelerator facilities, and to deliver complex and sophisticated components to collaborative ventures worldwide. It will also ensure the continuity of on-going advanced education and research training for the foreseeable future, thus inspiring the next generation and preserving and enhancing a critical and vibrant national skills base in accelerator science and engineering. Taken together with its emerging collaboration with advanced industry in the UK and elsewhere, the Institute will also be able to continue to develop its direct contributions to the international competitiveness of the UK in the global challenges of energy, environment, health and security.

The STFC core grant leverages heavily on substantial matching contributions from the partnering stakeholders. When taken alongside the contributions of the other four partners, the renewed STFC funding to the Cockcroft Institute to 2017, together with the on-going funding from academia, the NWDA, the STFC and the EU, amounts to a total commitment of about £100M for the period to 2017.  These funds will continue to support laboratory and scientific infrastructure, operations, staff, faculty, post-doctoral researchers and students. On the basis of the initial STFC core funding from 2004, staff in the Cockcroft Institute secured additional responsive mode grants totalling approximately £12M to date from other UK research councils and EU.

The Cockcroft Institute has had many achievements since its foundation, particularly over the past three years. In particular, it has strengthened its global partnerships, having signed comprehensive collaborative Memoranda of Understanding with large international laboratories such as CERN in Europe and equivalents in USA, Canada and Asia. It has been extremely successful in its international recruitment campaign, attracting and appointing 11 new academic faculty members to date from around the world — Germany, UK, Canada, USA, Singapore, including appointment of its Inaugural Director via an international search. Five more such appointments are now in the plans till 2012. It has been and continues to be a host for major leadership positions in global and national projects driven by accelerators in search of the big questions such as understanding the very early evolution of the Universe, probing the fundamental laws of physics, exploring the nature and origin of matter at the “sub-attometric” scale and the ultra-fast dynamics of fundamental living processes. The institute scientists have pioneered new medical and energy technologies towards particle beam cancer therapy, medical diagnostic radio-isotopes and the Accelerator-Driven Sub-critical Reactors (ADSR). Emerging innovative techniques in compact linear accelerators, in microwave, terahertz and optical frequencies, and their interaction with physical and living matter, are beginning to extend the knowledge generated at the institute to applications addressing critical needs in the areas of energy, environment, health and global security.

Swapan Chattopadhyay, Director of the Cockcroft Institute said:

“I am delighted at the exciting opportunities for growth now secured for the Cockcroft Institute by this award. At the same time I am also aware of the struggles faced by our colleagues in UK in the fundamental areas of particle physics, nuclear and photon sciences -the very fields that we accelerator scientists and technologists aspire to enable.  In my privileged position as the Director of the institute, it will be one of my priorities to share our efforts and add value to the above scientific fields in the most optimised fashion achievable.”
    
ENDS
For more information contact:
Professor Swapan Chattopadhyay
Sir John Cockcroft Chair of Physics, Univs. of Liverpool, Manchester and Lancaster
Director, The Cockcroft Institute of Accelerator Science and Technology
T: +44 (0) 1925 603242
E: swapan@cockcroft.ac.uk
 or
Prof. John Dainton
Sir James Chadwick Chair of Physics, University of Liverpool
Chief Scientist and Founding Director
The Cockcroft Institute of Accelerator Science and Technology
T: +44 (0) 151 794 7769
E: j.b.dainton@cockcroft.ac.uk


Notes to editors

The Cockcroft Institute
The Cockcroft Institute is based at the Daresbury Science and Innovation Campus in a purpose-built building and infrastructure. It was officially inaugurated in 2006 by the then UK Minister of Science Lord Sainsbury. Professor Swapan Chattopadhyay has been the Inaugural Director of the Cockcroft Institute since April 17, 2007 and holds concurrently the very first Chair in accelerator science in UK, the Sir John Cockcroft Chair of Physics jointly at the three premier research-led universities in England’s northwest – Liverpool, Manchester and Lancaster -- who are partners in the institute, along with STFC’s Daresbury Laboratory and the NWDA.

The Universities of Liverpool, Manchester and Lancaster
The Universities of Liverpool and Manchester along with Lancaster University form a triangle of one of the strongest consortium of research-led universities in England’s North West. Lancaster University Physics department has been rated a 5* institution and ranked the very best, at the very top of all universities in UK in physics, in the most recent 2008 national Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) in UK. Universities of Liverpool and Manchester belong to the prestigious Russell Group of universities in UK along with Universities of Oxford, Cambridge and Imperial College and have been rated 4* in the most recent 2008 national RAE. The three universities together can lay claim to 28 Nobel prizes in the sciences to date awarded to a combination of past and present faculty, research staff and students.
http://www.liverpool.ac.uk, http://www.manchester.ac.uk, http://www.lancaster.ac.uk University of Manchester University of Lancaster University of Liverpool North West Development Agency Science and Technology Facilities Council