Brookhaven Physics Leaders
Satoshi Ozaki and Michael Harrison Receive IEEE's Particle Accelerator
Science & Technology Award
Upton, NY, 3 August 2007: Satoshi Ozaki and Michael Harrison,
physicist-administrators at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE)
Brookhaven National Laboratory who
led the decade-long development and construction of the Laboratory's
world-class particle accelerator, the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC),
were awarded the 2007 Particle Accelerator Science & Technology Award.
Sponsored by the Nuclear & Plasma Sciences Society of the Institute of
Electrical & Electronics Engineers (IEEE),
the award consists of $2,000, shared equally between the two recipients and
a plaque for each recipient with the inscription: "For leadership in the
successful design and construction of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider."
"It is rewarding to receive this recognition from IEEE, " said Ozaki. "RHIC
has exceeded our original expectations. It is producing outstanding physics
results both in the relativistic heavy ion and spin physics programs. I
would like to thank everyone who made RHIC possible, but, in particular,
Nobel Laureate T.D. Lee from Columbia University, who thought of the
original idea of physics at RHIC, and former Brookhaven Lab Director
Nicholas Samios and his colleagues, who brought the idea to realization. I
also thank those who gave us strong and steady support throughout the
project, including the DOE Office of Nuclear Physics."
"I am delighted to receive this award," said Harrison. "This project
involved not only many scientists, engineers, technicians and support staff
at Brookhaven, but also several successful partnerships with industry. All
helped to achieve the goal of bringing RHIC on line on time and within
budget," Harrison said. "RHIC has made possible new horizons in physics, and
I am confident that many more important discoveries will be made at the
world-class accelerator."
About 500 people were involved in the design and construction of RHIC,
commissioned in 1999. About 1,000 physicists from around the world run
experiments at RHIC, colliding very high energy subatomic particles known as
heavy ions head-on to study the type of matter that existed a millionth of a
second after the Big Bang. In 2005, physicists at RHIC discovered a "perfect
liquid," a type of matter that has not existed since the beginning of the
universe. This is a feat that crossed into a new frontier of scientific
exploration.
This year, RHIC is colliding high-energy beams of polarized protons -
protons that spin in the same direction - the world's first and only
accelerator to do so. Protons spin in a way that is similar to the Earth
spinning on its axis. Scientists at RHIC hope to solve the mystery of what
causes proton spin.
Satoshi Ozaki earned his Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology in 1959 and immediately joined Brookhaven Lab in that same
year as a research associate. He rose through the ranks to become a tenured
senior physicist in 1972. In 1981, he joined KEK, a research institute in
Japan, to direct the construction of TRISTAN, the first major high energy
physics research collider in the country. After completing TRISTAN on
schedule and within budget, Ozaki returned to Brookhaven in 1989 as head of
the RHIC construction project. Besides successfully bringing the
$660-million collider to fruition, Ozaki was instrumental in bringing
polarized proton capability to RHIC with funding support from the RIKEN
Institute of Japan.
Currently, Ozaki directs the Accelerator Systems Division for Brookhaven's
NSLS-II Project, involved in planning for a synchrotron light source that
will provide extremely bright x-rays for basic and applied research in many
areas of science. Ozaki serves on various advisory and review committees for
U.S. and international institutions, laboratories and government agencies.
He is a Fellow of the American Physics Society (APS) and the Chair Elect of
the APS Forum for International Physics.
After Michael Harrison earned his Ph.D. in physics from Liverpool
University, England, in 1973, he worked for Computing Devices Company in
Ottawa, Canada, before joining DOE's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
in Batavia, Illinois, in 1975, as a research associate, where he was
eventually promoted to deputy head of the Accelerator Division. He joined
Brookhaven in 1991 as associate project director of the RHIC project. In
2000, he became head of the Laboratory's Superconducting Magnet Division,
and, in 2005, he was appointed as project director for Brookhaven's Center
for Functional Nanomaterials, a new facility at the Laboratory that is used
by scientists to explore and develop nanomaterials - materials on a scale of
a billionth of a meter - aimed at helping the U.S. to achieve energy
independence.
Harrison is an APS Fellow and a former member of the High Energy Physics
Advisory Panel. He has served on national and international committees and
participated in numerous DOE project and laboratory program reviews. - 30 -