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**ブロークヘブン国立研究所(BNL)の相対論的重イオン衝突型加速器(RHIC)が2026年2月6日、25年にわたる運用を終了した。**
制御室でエネルギー省副科学局長が赤いボタンを押すと、長年同施設で研究を続けてきた物理学者たちからは歓声とともに「寂しい」という声が上がった。
RHIC は2000年に金原子核の200 GeV/n衝突を初め、クォーク・グルーオン・プラズマの生成・液体様の“完璧流体”としての性質、スピン問題の解決、史上最大規模の反物質生成、そして最近ではプラズマ内部での“仮想粒子”の直接観測といった数多くの画期的成果を残した。最終走行だけで数百ペタバイトのデータが取得され、科学的遺産は衝突が止まっても残る。
RHIC の撤去部材の一部は、次世代装置である **電子イオン衝突型加速器(EIC)** の建設に再利用される。EIC は RHIC の地下リングのうち一つを電子用に改装し、電子で金イオンを「ナイフ」のように切り込み、クォークとグルーオンの構造をさらに詳しく探ることを目指す。米国で新たに建設される最初の粒子衝突装置として、欧州・アジアに後れを取っていた米国の粒子物理学を再び国際舞台の中心に戻す期待が寄せられている。
RHIC の閉鎖は米国内唯一の対向ビーム型加速器の消失でもあり、同装置の功績と新たな EIC への期待が交錯する「甘く切ない」転換点となった。
2001: "Brookhaven Labs has produced for the first time collisions of gold nuclei at a center of mass energy of 200GeV/nucleon."
2002: "There may be a new type of matter according to researchers at Brookhaven National Laboratory."
2010: The hottest man-made temperatures ever achived were a record 4 trillion degree plasma experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York... anointed the Guinness record holder."
2023: "Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory have uncovered an entirely new kind of quantum entanglement."
2026: On Friday, February 6, "a control room full of scientists, administrators and members of the press gathered" at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Lab in Upton, New York to witness its final collisions, reports Scientific American:
The vibe had been wistful, but the crowd broke into applause as Darío Gil, the Under Secretary for Science at the U.S. Department of Energy, pressed a red button to end the collider's quarter-century saga... "I'm really sad" [said Angelika Drees, a BNL accelerator physicist]. "It was such a beautiful experiment and my research home for 27 years. But we're going to put something even better there."
That "something" will be a far more powerful electron-ion collider to further push the frontiers of physics, extend RHIC's legacy and maintain the lab's position as a center of discovery. This successor will be built in part from RHIC's bones, especially from one of its two giant, subterranean storage rings that once held the retiring collider's supply of circulating, near-light speed nuclei...slated for construction over the next decade. [That Electron-Ion Collider, or EIC] will utilize much of RHIC's infrastructure, replacing one of its ion rings with a new ring for cycling electrons. The EIC will use those tiny, fast-flying electrons as tiny knives for slicing open the much larger gold ions. Physicists will get an unrivaled look into the workings of quarks and gluons and yet another chance to grapple with nature's strongest force. "We knew for the EIC to happen, RHIC needed to end," says Wolfram Fischer, who chairs BNL's collider-accelerator department. "It's bittersweet."
EIC will be the first new collider built in the US since RHIC. To some, it signifies the country's reentry into a particle physics landscape it has largely ceded to Europe and Asia over the past two decades. "For at least 10 or 15 years," says Abhay Deshpande, BNL's associate laboratory director for nuclear and particle physics, "this will be the number one place in the world for [young physicists] to come."
The RHIC was able "to separately send two protons colliding with precisely aligned spins — something that, even today, no other experiment has yet matched," the article points out:
During its record-breaking 25-year run, RHIC illuminated nature's thorniest force and its most fundamental constituents. It created the heaviest, most elaborate assemblages of antimatter ever seen. It nearly put to rest a decades-long crisis over the proton's spin. And, of course, it brought physicists closer to the big bang than ever before...
When RHIC at last began full operations in 2000, its initial heavy-ion collisions almost immediately pumped out quark-gluon plasma. But demonstrating this beyond a shadow of a doubt proved in some respects more challenging than actually creating the elusive plasma itself, with the case for success strengthening as RHIC's numbers of collisions soared. By 2010 RHIC's scientists were confident enough to declare that the hot soup they'd been studying for a decade was hot and soupy enough to convincingly constitute a quark-gluon plasma. And it was even weirder than they thought. Instead of the gas of quarks and gluons theorists expected, the plasma acted like a swirling liquid unprecedented in nature. It was nearly "perfect," with zero friction, and set a new record for twistiness, or "vorticity." For Paul Mantica, a division director for the Facilities and Project Management Division in the DOE's Office of Nuclear Physics, this was the highlight of RHIC's storied existence. "It was paradigm-changing," he says...
Data from the final run (which began nearly a year ago) has already produced yet another discovery: the first-ever direct evidence of "virtual particles" in RHIC's subatomic puffs of quark-gluon plasma, constituting an unprecedented probe of the quantum vacuum.
RHIC's last run generated hundreds of petabytes of data, the article points out, meaning its final smash "isn't really the end; even when its collisions stop, its science will live on."
But Science News notes RHIC's closure "marks the end for the only particle collider operating in the United States, and the only collider of its kind in the world. Most particle accelerators are unable to steer two particle beams to crash head-on into one another."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.