Cockcroft Institute Awarded more than £11 million to boost accelerator research
The Cockcroft Institute (CI), a partnership between the Universities of Lancaster, Liverpool, Manchester and Strathclyde, and the Science & Technology Facilities Council (STFC), has been awarded more than £11 million for R&D into accelerator science and technology.
The funding, awarded by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), will enable the institute to continue using its expertise to develop scientific frontier facilities, novel acceleration techniques, address global challenges in health, security, energy, manufacturing and the environment, and to train the next generation of accelerator experts in areas where there is a recognized international skills shortage.
CI Director, Professor Peter Ratoff, said: “The Cockcroft Institute is the de facto national centre for particle accelerator R&D in the UK, comprising about 250 academics, STFC professional accelerator staff, post-doctoral research associates, administrative staff and PhD students. It is probably the largest of its kind globally, delivering world class education, training and R&D in conventional and novel methods of acceleration with major contributions to the realization of national and international accelerator facilities. The STFC core grant provides crucial support for our research and the significant award is testament to the outstanding quality of the work carried out across the institute.”
Over the next four years, the CI will further its research programme into scientific frontier facilities and underpinning technologies, novel acceleration techniques and applications of accelerators. The institute will grow its existing international research partnerships and use the core grant to leverage additional support from a range of funders.
Liverpool is a founding member of the institute and has been carrying out leading research in all of the above areas. Professor Carsten P Welsch, leader of the accelerator science cluster, said: “We are absolutely delighted about this award. Liverpool has been exceptionally successful as part of the Cockcroft partnership and we look forward to implementing our plans over the next core grant period. Through Dr Tessa Charles as a new lecturer in the physics department and the many extremely talented and highly motivated researchers in our cluster, we will no doubt continue to make key contributions to accelerator R&D.”
The core grant will allow the CI to continue to deliver world-class research and development in particle accelerator science & technology that is well aligned to national science policy and the strategic requirements of the partner universities and UKRI/STFC.