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Office of Science and Technology Policy Executive Office of the President Eisenhower Executive Office Building Washington, DC 20502 |
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SPEECH October 2, 2002 |
Contact: Kathryn Harrington (202) 456-6124 kharring@ostp.eop.gov |
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
Fortieth Anniversary Celebration
Stanford, California
October 2, 2002
Remarks by
John Marburger
Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
Executive Office of the President
Thank you for inviting me to speak on this happy occasion. In the fall semester
of 1959, I took a course in electromagnetism at Princeton from G.K. O’Neill, who
had proposed a storage ring for e+ e- collisions. As O’Neill discussed his work,
which fit well with the course material, I heard much about physics at Stanford,
and eventually decided to study here as a graduate student. I arrived in the
Fall of 1963, just a year after the founding of SLAC, and have followed the
fortunes of this great facility ever since. I was at the University of Southern
California working on applications of classical field theory in optics when the
first signs of structure within the proton were reported – work that earned the
1990 Nobel Prize for Taylor, Kendall and Friedman. And I was chairman of a
committee that recommended an annual prize for “California Scientist of the
Year” in the mid 1970’s. The prize went to Gerson Goldhaber for his
participation in a SLAC collaboration that observed “naked charm” in D mesons.
The corresponding quark-antiquark meson, having hidden its charm, merited only a
Nobel Prize in 1976 for Richter and Ting. The particle they observed is the only
one I know whose name changes as you fly over the continental divide (going West
it changes from J/psi to psi/J). The same runs at SPEAR in those days also
disclosed evidence of the tauon, for which Martin Perl received half the 1995
Nobel Prize. These have been good years for SLAC, and I am delighted that this
great laboratory is positioning itself today for decades more of outstanding
work at the very foundations of physical science.
Here are some words that seem appropriate to the state of fundamental physics as
we enter the 21st century:
“We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Through the unknown, remembered gate
When the last of earth left to discover
Is that which was the beginning;
At the source of the longest river
The voice of the hidden waterfall
And the children in the apple-tree
Not known, because not looked for
But heard, half-heard, in the stillness
Between two waves of the sea.
Quick now, here, now, always –
A condition of complete simplicity
(Costing not less than everything)
And all shall be well and
All manner of thing shall be well
When the tongues of flame are in-folded
Into the crowned knot of fire
And the fire and the rose are one.”
These closing lines of the fourth of T.S. Eliot’s “Four Quartets” illustrate
poetry’s awesome evocative power. The language of poetry, especially T.S.
Eliot’s poetry, strikes resonances because its abstract manner of expression
casts a broad net. The concrete words and subject matter are carefully chosen to
awaken our perception of broad themes that reach far beyond the narrative of the
poem.
I heard these particular lines years ago in a talk by Thomas Cottrell, a medical
dean at Stony Brook, at an awards ceremony for young faculty members. When it
was my turn to speak, I put aside my notes and talked about the extraordinary
convergence of particle physics and astronomy that was then emerging. The idea
that somehow the end of the great reductionist adventure would be “to arrive
where we started/ And know the place for the first time” seemed to capture a
vision of the future course of fundamental science.
How convenient it has been for particle physics that Fred Hoyle’s idea of
cosmology turned out to be wrong! Hoyle’s “continuous generation model” would
offer little opportunity to probe the extremes of density and temperature that
are typical at the origin of the rival “Big Bang model.” The mechanism of the
Big Bang (a phrase coined by Hoyle to ridicule the notion) turns the entire
universe into a microscope. Distances out into space become times back into the
past where scales shrink, and densities and temperatures soar. Our telescopes
become detectors in the greatest high energy physics laboratory in nature, to
observe the traces of the most awesome high energy event of all time.
We are very lucky to have this alternative means of studying microscopic
phenomena, because the capacity of our technology to reach the necessary
energies is lagging behind the phenomena we need to study. We know from galactic
motions that there is more matter in the universe than we can see. And it seems
likely that none of the stable objects in the current particle inventory of the
Standard Model can account for it. But the exploration of the Standard Model
itself, with its surprisingly wide spectrum of masses, has stretched our
technology almost to the limit. We are at the ragged edge of society’s ability
to produce accelerators of the necessary size. We think we have the lightest
Higgs excitation boxed in, and Fermilab’s Tevatron may have a crack at glimpsing
it. Surely CERN's Large Hadron Collider will excite a Higgs “something or
other.”
But the WIMPs, the Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, that astronomers tell
us must form clouds around all galaxies, may well have masses far beyond the
scope of any accelerator yet conceived. The favored super-symmetry extension of
the Standard Model exhibits a stable particle that might do the trick. Or
perhaps the WIMPs are among the particles, such as axions, associated with
mechanisms to explain “fine tuning” within the Standard Model, or all of the
above.
It is important to understand these particles, because dark matter is important
to the evolution of the cosmos. If we are going to use the cosmos as our
laboratory, we need to know enough about the WIMPs to unravel their role in the
cataclysmic early instants of the Big Bang. That means they have to be related
to the Standard Model, and to the field theories whose details produce the
properties of the vacuum.
Who ever would have guessed when SLAC began forty years ago that understanding
the vacuum, basically empty space in our frozen epoch of cosmic evolution, would
be the most challenging problem in physics today? The discovery in 1998, totally
unexpected, that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, is both
embarrassing and exciting. How could we have missed something that big? There is
nothing in our current theories that even comes close to producing the right
order of magnitude for the term in Einstein’s equation, the cosmological
constant, required for this effect. What the theory gives is a joke, more than a
hundred orders of magnitude off the mark.
The vacuum plays an essential role in the inflation theories, to which Stanford
scientists have contributed many of the most important ideas. And once again
these theories are important because they lead to phenomena that must be
understood to relate observable features of the universe to the structure and
symmetries of microscopic models – models that may include strings, and that we
hope will unify gravity with the gauge forces of the Standard Model. We are
going to need all the help we can get to tie these future theories down to
empirical reality.
The argument for building an accelerator beyond the LHC, it seems to me, must be
strongly linked to these ideas. At some point we will simply have to stop
building accelerators. I don’t know when that point will be reached, but we must
start thinking about what fundamental physics will be like when it happens.
Theory, of course, will continue to run on. But experimental physics at the
frontier will no longer be able to produce direct excitations of increasingly
massive parts of nature's spectrum, so it will have to do something else. There
are two alternatives. The first is to use the existing accelerators to measure
parameters of the standard model with ever-increasing accuracy so as to capture
the indirect effects of higher energy features of the theory, much as BABAR is
doing today at this laboratory. The second is to turn to the laboratory of the
cosmos, as physics did in the cosmic ray era before accelerators became
available more than fifty years ago.
Are we ready for this? When the last accelerator is built, will there still be a
gap in our knowledge that will prevent us from working productively in the
“Laboratory of the Cosmos?” There is no question that our ability to interpret
what we see in the sky depends on what we have learned about fundamental matter
in our earthly laboratories. How strong is this dependence? How much more do we
need from earth-bound accelerators before we can do without them? How can we
best prepare for the end of the accelerator era in fundamental physics?
However, and whenever, this transition occurs, it is clear to me that the fates
of deep space astronomy and particle physics are strongly entwined. In the long
run, the future of particle physics lies in space-based experiments, and its
productivity will depend on having a model of nature that is complete enough to
exploit cosmic phenomena as a guide to theory. Now is the time to begin
preparing for the long run.
I mentioned the “ragged edge” of society’s ability to deliver big accelerators.
“Society” likes science. It is willing to tax itself to provide funds for basic,
discovery-oriented research. It reads popular science books, watches educational
television shows on science, and encourages its young people to study such
impractical science topics as dinosaurs and black holes. In Congress, science
enjoys bipartisan support. All postwar administrations have supported basic
research, including the administration of President George W. Bush. But there is
a limit. Not, unfortunately, a well-defined or clearly articulated limit. We saw
this in the saga of the Superconducting Super Collider. That project did not
fail because of lack of love for particle physics, or even for lack of
understanding of the importance of the Higgs mechanism. It failed, in my
opinion, because the scale of the project exceeded a critical size – a size well
within the ability of society to pay, but placed within a domain of society’s
parameter space that is unstable against chaotic behavior.
If the SSC was beyond a threshold of stability, and the LHC is beneath it, the
Next Linear Collider is already in a gray area. I have expressed elsewhere my
conviction, in agreement with the High Energy Physics Advisory Panel, that the
NLC is a logical choice for a next big accelerator after LHC. I was always taken
with the simplicity of lepton-antilepton collisions, which create “little big
bangs” with simple spatial structure and simple quantum numbers. Moreover, I
think a lepton collider is the right kind of machine to do precision experiments
of the sort that are going to be necessary to probe mass regimes that are out of
reach. Whether it will be the “last big accelerator,” or whether a muon collider
or something else will have that honor, I don’t know. Perhaps we will find a way
to keep building ever larger accelerators throughout the 21st century. But
already with the LHC we are going to have to change the way such devices are
financed. No single nation is likely to pick up as much of the cost of the LHC
as host countries have in the past. To be successful, the project will need a
new model of international support.
What can the science community do to increase the inclination of society to
support these big machines? I think the best approach, and this is after a year
in Washington, D.C., is to tell the truth, the whole truth. But it must be told
carefully, in language that society can understand.
The truth is that particle physics is as exciting as it ever was. It is not
dead. The fact that we are having trouble seeing beyond the Standard Model is
not bad news. It means that the next discoveries will have a disproportionate
impact on our understanding of Nature. For the first time in a quarter-century
experiment is driving theory at the frontier, and not the other way around.
The truth is that Nature functions in such a way as to bring together the
science of the very large with the science of the very small, and that
opportunities have emerged for discovery about the fundamental nature of the
universe that we never expected. Technology places these discoveries within our
reach, but we need to focus efforts across widely separated disciplines to
realize the new opportunities.
The truth is that exploration of the new frontier will attract the best young
minds who will produce new technology to overcome the barriers which define the
limits of our perception. The excitement of discovery, and the human will to see
farther are powerful sources of vitality in our society.
What we should not do is give the impression that the accelerators and other
large scale apparatus are ends in themselves. Only the search for the ultimate
shape of Nature can justify such large expenditures, and we must subordinate all
other considerations to that grand end. Nor should we over-emphasize the
practical impact of new technologies that will emerge from the search. Too few
of us are truly aware of the actual histories of previous impacts. To those who
know, the proposition that high energy physics was responsible for magnetic
resonance imaging devices, for example, is naïve. And above all we should never
assume that the lay public will not be able to appreciate what we are about. We
need to support the science journalists who care, and those among us who have
the knack of translating the fragmented and highly technical knowledge that is
accumulating so rapidly into a coherent story as appealing to the lay public as
it is to us.
I began with poetry, which can speak with such compelling effect that we imagine
it to be the source of truth about ourselves and about the universe. This is an
illusion. The truths that poetry evokes are within ourselves – within the
experiences that lie in our memories and are drawn out by their resonances with
the propositions of the rhythmic lines. The truth lies in the experiences, the
poetry comes later. In the final analysis the exploration of the universe is
necessary to humanity because it provides the basis for its grandest art.
That sublime art, the comprehension in human terms, and the interpretation in
human metaphors, of a decidedly unhuman universe, is the ultimate justification
for institutions such as SLAC. It is fitting that we celebrate them on occasions
such as this. Thank you for inviting me to help.
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Last Update: Friday October 04, 2002 by Bellevin