Tag: Sun Valley

  • A project with a major impact

    A project with a major impact

    As much as 310 million euros has been
    invested in this project, called ELI-NP, eagerly awaited by both the European
    Union, and the rest of the world, and 50 scientists from Romania and abroad
    have so far been hired to work on it.






    The European Commissioner for Research,
    Science and Innovation, Carlos Moedas, who has recently visited the Magurele
    Platform, has described it as one of the projects that define his open science
    strategy. I started my career as an engineer, so this project is music to my
    ears, Moedas said. The important thing is for information to reach people in
    the most intelligible form and to help them, the Commissioner said, mentioning
    a chain of scientific breakthroughs, from the discovery of antimatter, which
    led to the possibility to diagnose cancer, to Eistein’s 1915 Theory of
    Relativity, which enabled us to use the GPS technology today.






    Carlos Moedas pleaded for better
    promotion of the ELI-NP, which he sees as a link between sciences and a magnet
    for researchers. He has also said the project is one of the most important on
    the continent and an opportunity for Europe to promote itself as a platform for
    sciences. It is also something that connects science with people’s day-to-day life,
    and we should talk about it more and attract as many people as possible to
    experiment and to make the invisible world observable, Carlos Moedas added.






    The complex in Magurele hosts the nuclear
    physics section of the ELI (Extreme Light Infrastructure) project. The Romanian
    pillar complements the other 2 components of the project, namely the
    high-energy beam science facility in Prague, and the Attosecond Light Pulse
    Source component to be hosted by Szeged in Hungary. The Romanian facility will
    focus on fundamental research on ultra-high intensity laser and laser-matter
    interaction.




    The laser power will reach an impressive
    10 million billion watt each, the equivalent of 100,000 billion light bulbs of
    100 W each. As experts explained, if a laser pulse of such power lasted for one
    second, it would require the entire amount of electricity produced in the world
    for nearly 2 weeks to fuel it. This means the over 1,000 times the combined
    power of all power plants in the world. But, because the light pulse is extremely
    short, of just tens of femtoseconds (one millionth of one billion second), the
    average energy consumption level is reasonable. The Magurele project sets an
    example, scientifically and financially, according to the head of the Atom
    Physics Institute attached to the platform,




    Nicolae Zamfir: This is a symbolic project
    for the European Commission, it is the first piece of major infrastructure
    financed by regional development funds. This is one of the most highly
    appreciated projects in Brussels.






    While attending a meeting dedicated to
    this project, Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos said that involvement was needed on
    the part of local authorities and private businesses to reap the full benefits
    that the Magurele laser could grant:






    Dacian
    Ciolos: This
    research project can generate technological development, it can generate the
    development of university learning, of a university campus, start-up
    enterprises, SMEs working in various domains, using the technology and the
    facilities offered by this laser. There is already an urban development project
    for developing this area. We now have a study of the economic and social
    development potential of the region. Within a few months, by mid-December, we
    aim to have a governance concept for this territorial development project.






    According to the Prime Minister,
    investing in the Magurele laser could generate annual revenues of six hundred
    million Euro, and around seven thousand jobs. Dacian Ciolos added that Romania
    wants to go beyond research and applied research, using the laser as a source
    for local development. One example to this end is the competition for urban
    development for rebuilding the town of Magurele around the laser facility. Four
    students from the Bucharest School of Architecture won first prize with the Sun
    Valley Project, with streets, squares, parks and a balanced approach to
    technology, public transportation and office buildings.