India becomes associate member of CERN

22 Nov 2016

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India and the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) on Tuesday signed an agreement making India an associate member state of CERN, the world's largest nuclear and particle physics laboratory.

Sekhar Basu, chairman, Atomic Energy Commission and secretary, department of atomic energy and CERN director general Fabiola Gianotti signed the agreement in Mumbai. The agreement follows the CERN Council adopting a resolution to this effect at its meeting on 15 September.

CERN is based in Geneva on the French-Swiss border. Scientists and engineers at CERN are probing the fundamental structure of the Universe by using the most sophisticated scientific instruments and advanced computing systems.

CERN currently has 22 member states, four associate member states, while it has given observer status to four states and three international organisations.

Participation in CERN programmes and collaborative research with researchers from large number of national Institutes and Universities has been of great value for the scientific community in India in the pursuit of fundamental knowledge, achieving scientific and engineering breakthrough as well as training the next generation of scientists.

In fact, the participation of Indian scientists dates back to early 1960s, which has become much stronger and closer for the last quarter of a century with active support of Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and Department of Science and Technology (DST).
 
In 1991, DAE signed a formal agreement with CERN, which continues till today. In recognition of most significant contributions, in 2003, India was awarded the observer status of CERN, and subsequently invited to join CERN as an associate member. Last year, the union cabinet gave its approval following which the CERN Council formalise India's status as an associate member.

In recent years, Indian scientists have been involved in all pioneering activities at CERN. India has made significant contributions to the construction of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), in the areas of design, development and supply of hardware accelerator components/systems and its commissioning and software development and deployment in the machine.

India is one of the leading partners in the ALICE experiment, which is on a quest to unearth the physics of quark-gluon plasma (QGP) and to get a glimpse of how matter behaved within a few microseconds after the birth of our Universe. The discovery of the Higgs Boson at the LHC is the most talked about scientific discovery in recent memory.

Indian scientists have played a significant role in the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiments, which is one of the two large experiments that have led to the discovery of the Higgs Boson. Indian scientists have been named as part of this historic discovery. This helps India in participating in the high end technology related to high energy accelerators.

It is noteworthy to mention the involvement of Indian scientists in high-tech particle detectors and electronics research, ISOLDE and n-TOF experiments, and various application oriented programmes, including medical imaging.

In the field of large-scale computing, India has made major contributions in terms of designing, developing and deploying software for the Worldwide Large Hadron Collider Grid (WLCG).

The grid Tier2 centers established at Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre (VECC), Kolkata and Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), Mumbai have provided the pledged resources and are operating with 96 per cent uptime, thereby facilitating running of computational jobs by various CERN collaborations.

As an associate member of CERN, India will be a part of the huge scientific and technological endeavour. The India-CERN association as a whole is interdisciplinary in nature and the involvement of physicists, electronics hardware and software engineers will pave the path for overall knowledge development in the best possible way.

India has been putting efforts to design, develop and utilise various types of electron and proton accelerators for scientific, industrial and societal use. Becoming associate member of CERN will enhance participation of young scientists and engineers in various CERN projects and bring back knowledge for deployment in the domestic programmes.

It will also open opportunities for Indian industries to participate directly in the CERN project. Through the Teachers programme, teachers teaching in the higher secondary schools would also be able to participate in the programme and pass on the knowledge and quest for high-end science to their students, thereby encouraging large number of students to pursue their career in science.

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