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TRIUMF
TRIUMF
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49°14′52″N 123°13′50″W / 49.247792°N 123.230596°W / 49.247792; -123.230596

Key Information

TRIUMF Main Cyclotron
Control room of the TRIUMF main cyclotron.
General properties
Accelerator typecyclotron
Beam typeproton
Target typeFixed target
Beam properties
Maximum energy520 MeV
Maximum current400 μA
Physical properties
Radius28 feet (8.5 m)
LocationVancouver, British Columbia
InstitutionConsortium of twelve Canadian universities.
Dates of operation1974–present

TRIUMF is Canada's national particle accelerator centre. It is considered Canada's premier physics laboratory,[1] and consistently regarded as one of the world's leading subatomic physics research centres.[2] Owned and operated by a consortium of universities, it is on the south campus of one of its founding members, the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It houses the world's largest normal conducting cyclotron,[3] a source of 520 MeV protons, which was named an IEEE Milestone in 2010.[4] Its accelerator-focused activities involve particle physics, nuclear physics, nuclear medicine, materials science, and detector and accelerator development.

Over 500 scientists, engineers, technicians, tradespeople, administrative staff, postdoctoral fellows, and students work at the site. It attracts over 1000 national and international researchers every year, and has generated over $1 billion in economic activity over the last decade.

To develop TRIUMF's research priorities, physicists based at the facility and the university follow the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council's (NSERC) long-range plan for subatomic physics.[5] TRIUMF also has over 50 international agreements for collaborative research.[6]

Asteroid 14959 TRIUMF is named in honour of the laboratory.[7]

History

[edit]

TRIUMF was founded in 1968 by Simon Fraser University, the University of British Columbia, and the University of Victoria to meet research needs that no single university could provide. The name TRIUMF was originally an acronym based on TRI University Meson Facility, but no longer reflects its current state as a consortium of 21 member universities across Canada.[8]

TRIUMF entrance

Since its inception as a local university facility, it has evolved into a national laboratory while maintaining strong ties to Canadian universities' research programs. Its related fields of study have expanded from nuclear physics to include particle physics, molecular and materials science, nuclear medicine, and accelerator research and development.

TRIUMF's 520 MeV cyclotron was officially commissioned on February 9, 1976 by Pierre Trudeau, the 15th Prime Minister of Canada, who said, "I don't really know what a cyclotron is, but I am certainly very happy Canada has one."[9]

Before the Riken SRC (superconducting ring cyclotron) was built, TRIUMF was the world's largest cyclotron in terms of weight and beam or magnetic field radius. The Riken SRC is now heavier than the TRIUMF cyclotron, but TRIUMF has the largest beam radius and largest vacuum tank. Riken's magnetic field covers from 3.5 m to 5.5 m radius with maximum beam radius of about 5 metres (200 in), while TRIUMF's field goes from 0 to about 320 inches radius with maximum beam radius of 310 inches, as it requires a lower magnetic field to reduce EM stripping.

Laboratory directors

[edit]

TRIUMF has had nine directors of its operations:

Historic timeline

[edit]

1965 – BC nuclear physicists agree on meson facility

1968 – John Warren becomes first director of TRIUMF

1969 – TRIUMF holds opening ceremony

1970 – Ground-breaking ceremony

1971 – Cyclotron assembly begins, Reginald Richardson becomes director of TRIUMF

1974 – Cyclotron produces its first beam

1975 – Proton science program initiated, first polarized proton beam, first μSR experiment at TRIUMF

1976 – Pierre Elliot Trudeau's official dedication, Dr. Erich Vogt becomes an Officer of the Order of Canada, Jack Sample becomes director of TRIUMF

1977 – Medium-resolution spectrometer MRS in operation, first Ph.Ds using TRIUMF beams

1978 – Neutron activation analysis started, AECL/Nordion agreement for medical isotope production, first production of Iodine-123 on Beamline 4A for distribution in Canada

1979 – First new pion/muon beamline M13, pion cancer therapy program initiated

1980 – PET camera construction begins (2nd in Canada), TPC built to study rare decas (1st used in an experiment)

1981 – KAON Factory studies initiated, Erich Vogt becomes director of TRIUMF

1982 – Isotope pipeline to UBC hospital installed, completion of n-p and p-p program, AECL Commercial Products ships first isotopes from TRIUMF

1983 – PET dedicated by the Queen, first commercial cyclotron on site, first isotope separation on-line (ISOL) study

1985 – First purpose-built surface muon channel, NSERC funds HERA beamline at the DESY Lab in Germany

1986 – Contribution to 50 MeV beamline to HERA on behalf of Canada

1987 – Yamasaki awarded Imperial Medal (μSR cited), TISOL facility produces first radioactive beam, University of Manitoba and Université de Montréal become associate members, TRIUMF becomes Canada's national meson facility

1988 – EBCO makes first 30 MeV medical cyclotron, KAON Factory project-definition study funded, University of Toronto becomes an associate member

1989 – NRC adds Tech Transfer to TRIUMF mandate, University of Regina becomes an associate member

1990 – TR-30 installed, ISACI(isotope accelerator) design begins

1991Buckyballs studied by μSR, Second arm spectrometer SASP completed

1992 – Rob Kiefl wins Herzberg Medal for MuSR studies, TISOL Red Giant 12C(α,γ)

1993 – Atom trapping begins at TRIUMF, TR-13 medical cyclotron installed

1994 – Alan Astbury becomes director of TRIUMF, ATLAS and LHC involvement at CERN initiated

1995 – Ocular melanoma treatment begins, TRINAT first traps atoms, HERMES detector components to HERA, commercial radiation effect testing with protons begin

1996 – BaBar central wire chamber construction approved

1997 – ISAC-I civil construction begins, TWIST approved, SNO involvement begins, DRAGON experiment proposed

1998 – First beam from ISAC-I, Carleton University and Queens University become associate members, BaBar central wire chamber delivered, NSERC funds DRAGON

1999 – World's highest proton beam current ISOL (isotope online) facility, lifetime measurements of 37-K at ISAC, TRIUMF becomes Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics

2000 – Carleton University becomes a full member, McMaster University becomes an associate member, ISAC-II approved, ISAC-I accelerates first stable beam, CSI awarded for new PET, 8π spectrometer moved to TRIUMF

2001 – ISAC first accelerated rare-isotopes, first ISAC-I PRL, TUDA and DRAGON commissioned

2002 – Initial TIGRESS funding, TITAN development begins

2003 – University of Guelph becomes associate member, ISAC-II building opened, LHC magnets delivered to Geneva, Switzerland, ATLAS Tier-1 first CPUs received

2004 – University of Toronto becomes a full member, Saint Mary's University becomes an associate member, Seaborg Award to Don Fleming for pioneering work in muonium, charge radius of 11Li measured, T2K collaboration with J-PARC begins, Synergy Award for collaboration between TRIUMF and Nordion

2005 – 100th patient treated for ocular melanoma, TUDA 21Na(ρ,ρ')21Na results published, Jean-Michel Poutissou awarded Legion of Honour (France), first muon decay results from TWIST experiment

2006 – DRAGON 26Al(ρ,γ)27Si results published

2007 – Université de Montréal becomes a full member, Synergy Award for collaboration between TRIUMF and D-PACE, Nigel Lockyer becomes director of TRIUMF, first ISAC-II experiment 11Li(ρ,t)9Li measurement with MAYA, mass measurement of 11Li (shortest-lived and lightest ion ever measured in Penning trap)

2008 – TUDA measurement of 18F(ρ,α)15O, TRIUMF forms AAPS (Advanced Applied Physics Solutions) with CECR Research and development partnership with VECC Laboratory, Kolkata, India begins, Mass measurement of 6He (lightest ever so measured)

2009 – TIGRESS fully operational, new Nordion/TRIUMF radio-chemistry R&D initiative, TWIST obtains final results on muon decay, M9 beam line upgrade completed

2010 – ARIEL (Advanced Rare IsotopE Laboratory) project begins, first actinide target at ISAC

2011 – TRIUMF sets a world record for isotope production[10]

2015 – A TRIUMF-led multidisciplinary consortium is awarded the NSERC Brockhouse Canada Prize for Interdisciplinary Research in Science and Engineering for their outstanding collaboration in realizing a solution for the safe and reliable production of the critical medical isotope technetium-99m using cyclotrons.[11] The consortium includes physics, chemistry, and nuclear medicine experts from TRIUMF, the BC Cancer Agency, the Centre for Probe Development and Commercialization (CPDC), the Lawson Health Research Institute, and the University of British Columbia[12]

2018 – TRIUMF Celebrates its semicentennial, 50-years of operations, since receiving first funding.

2020 – TRIUMF becomes an incorporated entity. TRIUMF Inc. is a not-for-profit registered charity.

Canadian university partners

[edit]

Organizational structure

[edit]

TRIUMF is organized into four divisions that focus on varying aspects of research and operations:[14]

  • The Accelerator Division, responsible for the operation, maintenance, and upgrades required for all of the 520 MeV Cyclotron, ISAC, and TR-13 facilities. It is also responsible for the design, construction and commissioning of future on-site accelerators, and provides support for external accelerator projects.
  • The Engineering Division, responsible for the engineering, design and fabrication of mechanical, structural and electronic components, and for electrical and mechanical services and site maintenance.
  • The Physical Sciences Division, responsible for scheduling experiments approved by the Experimental Evaluation Committee (EEC), and for the design, installation, operation and maintenance of components, systems and subsystems for all experimental operations at the site. It is also responsible for the coordination of infrastructure support for external programs.
  • The Life Sciences Division, responsible for the support of projects approved by the Life Science Projects Evaluation Committee (LSPEC), and provides support for collaborations with the Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre (PPRC), BC Cancer (BCC), BWXT and other university faculties relying on radio-tracers from TRIUMF for their research. It is also responsible for the design, installation, operation and maintenance of components, systems and subsystems for the radioisotope production and processing facilities for tracers to be used in research projects both at TRIUMF and other laboratories. TRIUMF's nuclear medicine department is part of this division.

The Office of the Director, supported by the Deputy Directors of Research and Operations, has general oversight for:

  • The facility's administrative departments, including accounting and finance, environmental health and safety, general administration and security, human resources, procurement, quality assurance, strategic planning, communications and outreach, and supply chain management
  • The Applied Technology Group, consisting of several work teams including Isotope production, cyclotron operations, and technical support, which focuses on the production of radioactive isotopes for use by the medical isotope division of BWX Technologies (formerly Nordion), which are ultimately deployed in the development of drugs and diagnosis and treatment of disease.

Additionally, TRIUMF Innovations (link to website) is TRIUMF's commercialization arm, linking its laboratories activities with tangible business and commercialization opportunities. Established in 2017, it replaced Advanced Applied Physics Solutions, Inc. (AAPS), TRIUMF's previous commercialization entity.[15]

Experiments

[edit]

As TRIUMF has selectively applied its expertise to other areas of research, and to the generation of entrepreneurial opportunities, its core program of nuclear, particle and accelerator physics has expanded to cover key areas in life, molecular and materials sciences.

Main cyclotron and proton beam lines

[edit]

At the heart of TRIUMF is the 520 MeV cyclotron that produces the primary proton beams. A large fraction of the TRIUMF program relies on these beams, including the ISAC, the Centre for Molecular and Materials Science programs in μSR and β-NMR, and the Proton Treatment Facility. The operation of the main cyclotron has enabled TRIUMF to acquire the expertise to operate the three medical cyclotrons for BWXT Medical and the TR-13 medical cyclotron used to produce medical isotopes, and assist companies to exploit commercial opportunities for the sale of cyclotron and other accelerator technologies.

The 520 MeV cyclotron

[edit]

TRIUMF produces negatively charged hydrogen ions (H: 1 proton, 2 electrons) from an ion source. The ions are transported through an evacuated electrostatic beam line containing elements to focus and steer the beam over 60m to the cyclotron. The 520 MeV (million electron volts) variable energy cyclotron accelerates these ions with a high frequency alternating electric field and uses a massive six-sector magnet to confine the beam in an outward spiral trajectory. Inserting a very thin graphite extraction foil strips, or removes, the electrons from the H ion while allowing the proton to pass through. The proton, because it is a positively charged particle, is deflected in the outward direction due to the magnetic field and is directed to a proton beam line.

The accelerating process takes approximately 0.3 ms before the proton achieves three-quarters the speed of light. The success of TRIUMF's programs depends on the ability to deliver protons from the cyclotron reliably. Typically, the cyclotron, although over 35 years old, averages an up-time of greater than 90% (2000–2007), with the 15-year average just under 90%. Typically the beam is delivered for about 5,000 hours per year with one major (three month) and one minor (one month) maintenance periods. The cyclotron beam properties and capabilities have improved over the years as a result of systems upgrades and the fundamental infrastructure providing the magnetic and electrical fields and the RF resonators as well as the vacuum vessel will serve TRIUMF for many more years.

The Four Proton Beamlines

[edit]

TRIUMF has four independent extraction probes with various sizes of foils to provide protons simultaneously to up to four beam lines. Because of the high energy of the proton beam, these beamlines use magnetic rather than electrostatic focusing and steering elements.

Beamline 1A (BL1A)
can deliver 180 to 500 MeV protons to two target systems. The beam power ranges from 50 to 75 kW. The first target, T1, services three experimental channels. The second target, T2, services two μSR experimental channels. Downstream of T2 is a 500 MeV facility used to produce strontium isotopes for medical-imaging generators as well as the Thermal Neutron Facility (TNF).
Beamline 1B
separates off BL1 at the edge of the cyclotron vault and provides international users with the Proton Irradiation Facility (PIF) that is used for radiation testing of electronic circuits, for example, mimicking space radiation for testing computer chips.
Beamline 1U (BL1U)
shares the proton beam with beamline 1A and is designed to divert up to 20 kW of its beam power onto a spallation source for ultracold neutrons, which can be used to study fundamental properties of the neutron.
Beamline 2A (BL2A)
capable of providing 475 to 500 MeV proton beams at up to 50 kW to the ISAC target facility that produces rare-isotope ion beams for a host of Canadian and international experiments.
Beamline 2C (BL2C)
used for the Proton Therapy Program to treat choroidal melanomas (eye tumours) and proton irradiation to produce strontium isotopes, which are chemically processed and then used for medical imaging generators. This beam line also has the flexibility to provide protons of lower energy for PIF users. The energy range for this line is 70 to 120 MeV.
Beamline 4 North (BL4N)
(expected completion 2017), will be a new 500 MeV beamline used for the proposed expansion of ISAC with a specialized actinide target.

ISAC and ARIEL facilities for rare-isotope beams

[edit]

The ISAC and ARIEL (under construction) facilities produces and uses heavy ion beams to produce short-lived isotopes for study. Proton beam from the main accelerator is used as a driver beam at ISAC via beamline BL2A and one of the two ARIEL target stations via beamline BL4N (under construction) to produce beams of exotic isotopes which are further accelerated using linear accelerators. The second target station at ARIEL uses an electron beam from the TRIUMF elinac as a driver beam. Several experiments study the properties and structure of these exotic isotopes along with their nucleosynthesis. Between ISAC-I and ISAC-II, many experiments can be completed.

ISAC-I facility

[edit]

In the ISAC-I facility, 500 MeV protons at up to 100 μA can be steered onto one of two production targets to produce radioactive isotopes. The isotopes pass through a heated tube to a source where they are ionized, accelerated off the source's high-voltage platform at up to 60 kV and sent through a mass separator to select the ion beam of choice. The beam is transported in the low-energy beam transport (LEBT) electrostatic beam line and sent via a switch-yard to either the low-energy experimental area or to a series of room-temperature accelerating structures to the ISAC-I medium-energy experimental area. Experiments at ISAC-I include:

8π spectrometer
[edit]

A microscope used to examine the behaviour of atomic nuclear produced, which are collected at the centre of 8pi where they undergo radioactive decay. The main component of the 8π spectrometer are the Hyper-pure Germanium detectors used to observe gamma rays emitted from excited states of daughter nuclei.

DRAGON
[edit]

The Detector of Recoils And Gammas Of Nuclear Reactions (DRAGON) is an apparatus designed to measure the rates of nuclear reactions important in astrophysics, particularly nucleosynthesis reactions which occur in the explosives environments of nova, supernova, and x-ray bursters.

Laser spectroscopy
[edit]

The Collinear Fast-Beam Laser Spectroscopy (CFBS) experiment at TRIUMF is designed to exploit the high beam-intensity and radioisotope-production capability of TRIUMF's ISAC facility, as well as modern ion-trap beam-cooling techniques, in order to measure the hyperfine energy levels and isotope shifts of short-lived isotopes using laser spectroscopy.

TITAN
[edit]

TRIUMF's Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear Science (TITAN) measures the mass of short-lived isotopes with high precision. Radioactive isotopes from ISAC are sent to TITAN to undergo cooling, charge-breeding and trapping. The entire process occurs in about 10 milliseconds, allowing radioactive isotopes with short half-lives to be studied.

TRINAT
[edit]

TRINAT, TRIUMF's Neutral Atom Trap, holds a cluster of neutral atoms suspended in a very small space, in high vacuum, allowing for the study of decay products of radioactive atoms.

ISAC-II facility

[edit]

The rare-isotope beams produced in the ISAC-II facility are transported in the low-energy beam transport (LEBT) electrostatic beam line and sent via a switch-yard to either the low-energy experimental area or to a series of room-temperature accelerating structures in the ISAC-I medium-energy experimental area. For high-energy delivery, the drift tube linac (DTL) beam is deflected north along an S-bend transfer line to the ISAC-II superconducting linear accelerator (SC-linac) for acceleration above the Coulomb barrier (5–11 MeV/u). TRIUMF began developing superconducting accelerator technology in 2001 and is now a leader in the field with a demonstrated accelerating gradient (at low beta) significantly above other operating facilities. Experiments at ISAC-II include:

EMMA
[edit]

The ElectroMagnetic Mass Analyzer (EMMA) (completion date 2016) is a recoil mass spectrometer for TRIUMF's ISAC-II facility. ISAC-II will provide intense beams of radioactive ions with masses up to 150 atomic mass units to international scientists studying nuclear structure and nuclear astrophysics. The energies of these beams will depend on the specific nuclei being accelerated, but typical top speeds will range from 10–20% of the speed of light.

HERACLES
[edit]

Formerly known as the Chalk River/Laval array, HERACLES consists of 150 scintillators detectors covering almost 4-pi. It was used in over a dozen of experiments in the last ten years for multi-fragmentation studies at intermediate energies (10 to 100 MeV/A).

TIGRESS
[edit]

The TRIUMF-ISAC Gamma-Ray Escape Suppressed Spectrometer (TIGRESS) is a state-of-the art new gamma-ray spectrometer designed for a broad program of nuclear physics research with the accelerated radioactive ion beams provided by the ISAC-II superconducting linear accelerator.

ISAC-I/II

[edit]

The experiments listed below utilize both facilities.

TUDA
[edit]

A general purpose facility for studying nuclear reactions of astrophysical significance with solid state detectors.

TACTIC
[edit]

An ionization chamber with full track reconstruction capabilities for studying reactions of astrophysical importance.

DSL
[edit]

TRIUMF's Doppler Shift Lifetimes facility, which is an experimental setup for the measurement of the lifetimes of excited states of nuclei.

ATLAS Canadian Tier-1 Data Centre

[edit]

The ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN uses proton-proton collisions at the highest energy ever achieved in the laboratory to look for the Higgs Boson, the particle central to the current model of how subatomic particles attain mass. ATLAS will also search for phenomena "beyond the standard model" of particle physics such as supersymmetry, extra dimensions, and quark compositeness. The ATLAS detector will observe the particles emerging from the roughly 900 million proton-proton collisions per second and, although fast electronics will filter the events so that only those most likely to be of interest will be recorded, ATLAS will produce 3.5–5.0 petabytes of data per year (one petabyte is one million gigabytes). In addition, secondary data sets will be produced that could double the amount of data produced.

In order to analyze this enormous amount of information, CERN is coordinating an international network of large high-performance computing centres that are linked by grid computing tools so that they act as one huge system. This network is called the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG). The Canadian Tier-1 Data Centre, located at TRIUMF, works with nine of the other ATLAS Tier-1 centres in the world to process the raw data produced by the experiment. In addition, Tier-2 centres located in universities, both in Canada and abroad, are used to further process the results of the Tier-1 analysis and extract groundbreaking physics results from the data. The Tier-2 centres will also be the primary sites for computer simulations of ATLAS, which is an integral part of the data analysis.

Centre for Molecular and Materials Science

[edit]

TRIUMF uses subatomic particles as probes of materials structure at the Centre for Molecular and Materials Science (CMMS). The chief techniques are μSR and β-NMR.

μSR

[edit]

TRIUMF utilizes a technique called μSR, a powerful probe into materials like semiconductors, magnets and superconductors. Beams of positive muons are created with their spins lined up in the same direction. When these beams are shot into a material, the muons' spins precess (wobble like a top) around the local magnetic fields in the material. The unstable muons soon decay into positrons; since these antielectrons tend to be emitted in the direction of the muons' spin, μSR scientists can examine how the internal magnetic fields of different materials have affected the muons' spins by observing the directions in which the positrons are emitted.

β-NMR

[edit]

β detected NMR is an exotic form of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) in which the nuclear spin precession signal is detected through the beta decay of a radioactive nucleus. The central question to be studied is how the local electronic and magnetic properties near an interface or surface of new materials (e.g.,. a high Tc superconductor) differ from those of the bulk.

Detector development

[edit]

TRIUMF uses its expertise gained from the development of detectors for particle and nuclear physics, in collaboration with Canadian universities, to support advanced detector development, including for molecular and materials sciences and nuclear medicine. TRIUMF's Science and Technology Department designs and constructs complete detector systems including mechanics, services, front end electronics, digital signal processing and data acquisition.

Nuclear medicine laboratories

[edit]

The core of the TRIUMF nuclear medicine program is Positron Emission Tomography or PET imaging, a technique whereby tiny amounts of radioactive nuclei known as radioisotopes are combined with certain bio-molecules and injected into the body. The biomolecules can be "traced" by imaging the decay products (two photons produced by the decay of the radioactive nucleus via the emission of a positron) outside the body. PET allows the concentration of positron-labeled compounds to be determined quantitatively in space and time within the living body. PET is more sensitive than any other human imaging method, such as MRI or CT, especially for the detection of cancer.

The PET program facilities at TRIUMF include cyclotron systems for the production of radioisotopes, chemistry labs for the synthesis of radiopharmaceuticals and quality control labs. TRIUMF currently uses the TR-13 medical cyclotron and target systems for the production of 18F, 11C, and 13N. Radiopharmaceutical production facilities include the small modular clean room at the cyclotron for the synthesis of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG). for BCCA as well as three chemistry annex labs for production and development of radiopharmaceuticals used in brain research and other programs at UBC.

Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre (PPRC) is a joint TRIUMF/UBC program studying central nervous system disorders. Approximately 80% of the studies are related to Parkinson's disease, and the remainder are related to mood disorders and Alzheimer's disease. The program has explored the origins, progression, and therapies of the disease as well as the complications arising from therapy using molecular imaging as the primary tool.

The Functional Imaging Program at the BCCA is a collaboration among the agency, TRIUMF, UBC, and the BC Children's Hospital. Capital acquired through the BC Provincial Health Services Authority Emerging Technologies Fund allowed purchase of the province's first hybrid PET/CT scanner in 2004. The clinical PET/CT program, located at BCCA's Vancouver Centre, was enabled by TRIUMF supplying 18F, the positron emitting radionuclide used in production of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG). FDG, as a marker of glucose metabolism, is the tracer used in oncologic PET imaging, a diagnostic study which has become a standard of care in the management of many cancer types.

Proton and neutron irradiation facilities

[edit]

Beginning in 1995, TRIUMF has built up several beamlines that provide low-intensity, energetic proton and neutron beams to simulate radiation exposures either in space or terrestrial environments. Even at low intensity, several minutes of exposure in these beams can correspond to years of operation in space, air, or ground so that accelerated testing of electronics can be carried out.

These TRIUMF facilities, PIF & NIF, have since become recognized as premier test sites for space-radiation effects using protons and, with the capability of using these protons to produce a neutron-energy spectrum similar to that found at aircraft altitudes and at ground level, testing with neutrons is also possible. A large fraction of the proton users are Canadian space-related companies such as MDA Corporation, while neutron use is primarily by international companies for avionics, microelectronics and communications equipment, such as The Boeing Company or Cisco Systems, Inc.

Additionally, one of the beamlines was used for the cancer treatment of ocular melanoma at the Proton Therapy Centre which was operated in conjunction with the BC Cancer Agency and the UBC Department of Ophthalmology. Before proton treatment became available, the most common course of action was removal of the eye. Other possible treatments included surgical removal of the tumour (which has severe limitations), or implanting a radioactive disk on the wall of the eye under the tumour for some days. These alternatives were unsuitable for large tumours, and could damage sensitive parts of the eye, often resulting in loss of vision. After proton therapy, however, patients can retain useful vision. The protons enter the eye at a carefully controlled energy, and come to rest at a precise, predictable distance inside. They deposit their energy of motion (kinetic energy) in a very narrow layer, destroying living cells in that layer. Because the beam of protons is so concentrated and deposits its energy so predictably, we can successfully destroy a tumour while better preserving the other nearby parts of the eye. The proton therapy program at TRIUMF was discontinued in 2019.

External scientific collaborations

[edit]

TRIUMF is also involved in the development and construction of detectors and equipment for larger particle physics experiments located all over the world.

ALPHA

[edit]

The international ALPHA Collaboration, focused on trapping antihydrogen with experiments based at CERN, includes members from TRIUMF. [16] The ALPHA-Canada team, led by TRIUMF research scientist Dr. Makoto C. Fujiwara, was recognized with the 2013 NSERC John C. Polanyi Award for their work with the ALPHA team at CERN in understanding antimatter.[17] The Canadian team included over a dozen scientists and students working in plasma, atomic, condensed matter, particle, detector, and accelerator physics, from the University of British Columbia (UBC), Simon Fraser University (SFU), the University of Calgary, York University, and TRIUMF.[18]

KEK

[edit]

TRIUMF has a longstanding collaborative relationship with Japan's KEK, which was further enhanced in December, 2015 when it was announced that each organization would be establishing branch offices at the other's respective institution to facilitate the advancement of their physics research activities.[19]

Large Hadron Collider

[edit]

TRIUMF accelerator physicists, engineers, and technical personnel have unique expertise for the design and construction of critical parts of the accelerator, such as assembling the liquid argon end cap calorimeters for the ATLAS detector. As well, TRIUMF was involved in the construction and procurement of several magnets and power supplies for the LHC itself. The resulting accelerator contributions were a necessary part of the Canadian investment in the project. TRIUMF is also home to the ATLAS-Canada Tier-1 Data Centre, funded by the Canada Foundation for Innovation. This centre will pre-process the raw data from the experiment prior to analysis by Canadian and foreign researchers. It will also provide domestic detector experts access to raw data for detailed calibration and monitoring.[20]

SNO

[edit]

TRIUMF first became actively involved in the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) when the project needed engineering help. TRIUMF's Design Office and Machine Shop built key components of the detector.[21] Moreover, TRIUMF scientists were involved in the project which was honored with the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics and the 2016 Fundamental Physics Prize for the discovery of neutrino oscillation.[22][23]

SNOLAB

[edit]

TRIUMF is involved with a number of projects at SNOLAB. Notable examples include the Helium and Lead Observatory (HALO) supernova neutrino detector which is part of the SuperNova Early Warning System (SNEWS)[24] and Dark Matter Experiment using Argon Pulse-shape discrimination (DEAP) the most sensitive weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) detector to date.[25]

T2K

[edit]

TRIUMF is part of the T2K (Tokai-to-Kamioka) neutrino oscillation experiment in Japan. TRIUMF is involved in constructing a time projection chamber and fine-grained detectors composed of plastic scintillators for the T2K near detector, to measure the properties of the neutrino beam at its production site in Tokai before it travels 295 km to Kamioka, over which distance neutrino oscillations are expected to take place.

TRIUMF Users' Group

[edit]

The TRIUMF Users Group (TUG) is an international community of scientists and engineers with a special interest in the use of the TRIUMF facility. Its purpose is:

  • to provide a formal means for exchange of information relating to the development and use of the facility;
  • to advise members of the entire TRIUMF organization of projects and facilities available;
  • to provide an entity responsive to the representations of its members for offering advice and counsel to the TRIUMF management on operating policy and facilities.

Any qualified scientist can join the users group. The group's interests are looked after by an elected committee (TRIUMF Users' Executive Committee or TUEC). Part of TUEC's responsibilities is to organize meetings on behalf of the membership were necessary. At least one meeting, the annual general meeting (AGM), is held each year near the beginning of December. A link to the TUG website is listed in the external links below.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
TRIUMF (originally the TRI-University Facility), Canada's centre, is the country's national laboratory dedicated to research in , located in , . Established in as a collaborative venture among Canadian universities, it operates as a not-for-profit corporation owned by a consortium of 21 member universities spanning the nation. The laboratory's centerpiece is the 520 MeV cyclotron, an 18-metre-diameter machine that accelerates protons to energies up to 520 MeV—reaching 75% the —and delivers multiple simultaneous beams for diverse experiments. TRIUMF advances knowledge in fundamental science through facilities like the ISAC radioactive ion beam complex and an electron linear accelerator, supporting research in particle physics, nuclear astrophysics, materials science, and life sciences. It serves as a global hub for isotope science, producing radioisotopes for medical applications such as cancer diagnostics and therapy, as well as industrial uses including radiation testing for space hardware. With nearly 600 staff, students, and researchers, TRIUMF fosters international collaborations, including major contributions to CERN's ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider, and drives innovation in education, economic growth, and technology transfer.

Overview and History

Founding and Mission

TRIUMF, originally known as the Tri-University Facility, was established in as a collaborative venture by three universities—, the , and the —to centralize and enhance research resources across . The joined the consortium almost immediately, making it a four-university initiative from the outset. In 2023, the consortium expanded to 21 full member universities nationwide when seven associate members were upgraded to full status. This partnership was formalized with initial funding of approximately $19 million CAD from the federal government through the Control Board, enabling the construction of the world's largest at the time. The laboratory was sited on the south campus of the in , , on unceded traditional territory of the Musqueam people. Construction commenced in April 1968 following the approval, involving a multidisciplinary team of physicists, engineers, and technicians who designed and built a 520 MeV capable of producing high-intensity proton beams for production. The project progressed rapidly, with the structure completed by 1972, though full commissioning required additional tuning and testing. On December 15, 1974, the facility achieved its first beam extraction, marking the operational debut of this groundbreaking accelerator and ushering in a new era of subatomic research in . This milestone was celebrated nationally, with Prime Minister presiding over the official opening in 1976. From its inception as a specialized factory, TRIUMF's mission has centered on advancing fundamental discoveries in subatomic physics through accelerator-based experiments, while also fostering applications in and . The laboratory has evolved into Canada's national centre, now serving a of 21 member universities, which provides shared access to its unique facilities and expertise. This expansion reflects TRIUMF's role in pooling resources for high-impact research that no single institution could undertake alone, promoting interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation.

Key Milestones

TRIUMF achieved a significant operational milestone on December 15, 1974, when the laboratory successfully extracted the first 520 MeV proton beam from its main cyclotron, marking the beginning of full-scale research activities and establishing Canada as a leader in accelerator-based particle physics. In 2001, the Isotope Separator and Accelerator (ISAC) facility enabled the production and delivery of accelerated rare-isotope beams, opening new avenues for nuclear physics experiments probing the structure of exotic nuclei. The laboratory commemorated the 50th anniversary of this inaugural beam extraction on December 15, 2024, with a series of celebratory events including Week reflections, the release of historical stories and posters, and community gatherings that highlighted TRIUMF's enduring impact on global science. In April 2024, the Canadian federal budget allocated approximately $400 million over five years to TRIUMF, representing the largest single investment in the laboratory's history and supporting enhanced operations starting in the 2025-2026 fiscal year. Building on this funding, TRIUMF released its Five-Year Implementation Plan for 2025-2030 in April 2025, outlining strategic priorities such as the completion and commissioning of the by 2027 to triple rare- beam production capacity, the initiation of operations at the and Medical Accelerator for Novel (IAMI) facility in 2026 to advance therapeutic isotope development, and the delivery of 5,000 hours of radioactive isotope beams to ISAC experiments by 2029. In 2025, the TITAN (TRIUMF's Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear science) experiment produced key publications, including a February study in that refined the topology of the "island of inversion" in nuclear structure through high-precision mass measurements, providing deeper insights into the behavior of under extreme conditions.

Laboratory Directors

TRIUMF has been led by a series of directors who have shaped its development from inception to its current status as Canada's national laboratory for particle and nuclear physics. Each director has contributed to key phases of growth, including facility construction, scientific expansion, and strategic planning.
DirectorTenureKey Contributions
John Warren1968–1971As the founding director, Warren spearheaded the initial proposal for a shared cyclotron facility among British Columbia universities, secured federal funding, and oversaw site selection at the University of British Columbia campus, laying the groundwork for construction.
John Reginald Richardson1971–1976Richardson managed the completion of the cyclotron and achieved the first 500 MeV proton beam in 1974, enabling early experimental operations and establishing TRIUMF's reputation in meson and particle physics research.
Jack Sample1976–1981Sample directed operations during the facility's ramp-up, focusing on beam delivery improvements and the integration of international users, which solidified TRIUMF's role in global nuclear physics collaborations.
Erich P. Vogt1981–1994Vogt broadened TRIUMF's scientific scope beyond particle physics, initiating the KAON Factory project in 1985 to develop a high-intensity proton accelerator and enhancing interdisciplinary programs in nuclear structure and astrophysics.
Alan Astbury1994–2001Astbury navigated post-KAON challenges by reorienting TRIUMF toward rare-isotope beam science, leading the development of the ISAC facility and securing funding for its initial phases to advance studies in nuclear matter and exotic isotopes.
Alan Shotter2001–2007Shotter oversaw the construction and commissioning of ISAC-I, expanding TRIUMF's capabilities in radioactive beam experiments and fostering partnerships for accelerator upgrades that supported precision measurements in weak interactions.
Nigel S. Lockyer2007–2013Lockyer advanced the ARIEL electron linear accelerator project to complement ISAC, emphasizing sustainable funding models and international collaborations that positioned TRIUMF as a leader in rare-isotope production for nuclear physics.
Jonathan Bagger2014–2020Bagger expanded TRIUMF's life sciences initiatives, including enhanced isotope production for medical applications, and strengthened ties with global facilities like CERN, while implementing strategic plans for facility modernization.
Nigel Smith2021–presentSmith has focused on international collaborations, leveraging a historic 2024 federal investment to implement the 2025–2030 strategic plan, which prioritizes accelerator upgrades and cross-disciplinary research in quantum technologies and materials science.

Organizational Structure

Governance and Leadership

TRIUMF is governed by a structured framework that ensures oversight from its university owners and alignment with national research priorities. The Members' Council, comprising one representative from each of the 21 member universities, holds ultimate authority and approves key documents such as budgets, annual reports, and major agreements. The Board of Governors, which represents the member universities, manages and supervises TRIUMF's day-to-day operations and is accountable to the Members' Council for these activities. In September 2025, Dr. Lisa Kalynchuk was appointed as Chair of the Board of Governors. Additionally, the Council provides strategic advice on research priorities, consisting of 21 appointees from the member universities, up to five TRIUMF staff members, and up to five external experts. The executive team is led by the CEO and , Nigel Smith, who has held the position since May 2021 and was reappointed through 2031 to guide TRIUMF's strategic initiatives. Supporting Smith are key roles including the , Chris Astle, who joined in April 2025 to oversee finance and supply chain operations. Other senior positions include the and directors of major divisions, such as the Physical Sciences Division led by Rituparna Kanungo, which coordinates experimental operations and scientific programs in nuclear and . TRIUMF's organizational departments are organized into divisions that support its core activities, including the Accelerator Division, Life Sciences Division, and Projects and Infrastructure Division. A notable addition in 2025 is the Experiment Operations group, led by M. Alcorta Moreno, focused on advancing rare-isotope beam delivery and commissioning targets for enhanced research capabilities by 2027. To maintain infrastructure, TRIUMF implements an integrated system as part of its "Weft & Warp" program, which streamlines maintenance, regulatory compliance, and operational efficiency. As a federally funded facility, TRIUMF maintains accountability to agencies like the (NRC) through the Advisory Committee on TRIUMF and the Agency Committee on TRIUMF, which oversee government investments and provide guidance on performance. This structure aligns with TRIUMF's 2025-2030 strategic implementation plan, which emphasizes completing major projects like and addressing deferred maintenance with a $399.1 million budget to advance subatomic physics and innovation in health and sustainability.

University Partners

TRIUMF operates as a owned and governed by 21 Canadian universities, which collectively fund and oversee the laboratory's operations. Founded in 1968 by , the , and the , the consortium has expanded to include the , , , , , , , , , Queen's University, , Saint Mary's University, , , , Western University, , and . Under this ownership model, member universities contribute financially through allocations from the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) to support major projects and share liabilities such as decommissioning costs, while also providing personnel who actively participate in programs and nominate representatives to bodies like the Members' Council. In return, universities gain priority access to TRIUMF's facilities and international collaborations, opportunities for joint appointments where TRIUMF scientists serve as adjunct faculty, and enhanced institutional reputation in subatomic physics and interdisciplinary fields. The plays a central role in coordinating Canada's subatomic physics research efforts from coast to coast, enabling shared infrastructure and expertise that no single could sustain alone. Recent expansions have strengthened this network; for instance, seven new universities joined in early 2023, bringing the total to 21 members and broadening participation in national initiatives. Additionally, in December 2023, the formalized strengthened ties with TRIUMF through a new collaboration focused on advancing research.

Facilities and Infrastructure

Main Cyclotron and Beamlines

The TRIUMF main cyclotron is a 520 MeV negative hydrogen ion (H⁻) accelerator featuring a 6-sector, sector-focused design with an 18-meter diameter vacuum chamber housed in a clamshell-shaped structure. The electromagnet, weighing 4000 tonnes, generates a magnetic field ranging from 0.30 T at the center to 0.58 T at the outer edges to maintain isochronous focusing for the orbiting ions. It accelerates up to 300 μA of beam current, enabling the production of intense proton beams upon extraction. Support systems include internal hot-cathode ion sources that produce H⁻ ions from gas via attachment, injecting them at 300 keV into the central region. Acceleration occurs through a 23 MHz radio-frequency (RF) system with four resonators providing up to 0.4 MV per turn across approximately 1250 turns to reach full energy. Beam extraction employs thin carbon foils or wires placed radially to strip the electrons, converting H⁻ to protons with near-100% efficiency and allowing up to four simultaneous extracted beams of adjustable energies from 70 to 520 MeV. The cyclotron achieved its first high-energy beam on December 15, 1974, and has operated continuously for over 5000 hours annually in a 24/7 schedule for about nine months each year. Reliability upgrades, including replacement of the main in 2017–2018 and ongoing such as cable replacements and cryopump servicing, ensure stable performance. The 2025–2030 strategic plan includes further refurbishments to the RF systems, controls, and to support long-term operation. Four primary proton beamlines transport the extracted beams to experimental areas. Beamline 1A delivers high-energy protons from 180 to 520 MeV at intensities up to 140 μA for high-energy physics targets, including pion production. Beamline 1B branches from the cyclotron vault to provide 180–500 MeV protons at variable intensities primarily for meson production in the Meson Hall. Beamline 2C supplies lower-energy protons from 65 to 120 MeV with adjustable intensities, such as 95 μA at 83 MeV or lower fluxes down to nanoamperes, for materials irradiation studies simulating radiation damage. Beamline 3C directs beams optimized for biomedical applications, including isotope production and proton therapy, typically at energies around 70–110 MeV with controlled intensities to meet clinical and research needs. These beamlines incorporate bending magnets, quadrupoles, and diagnostics for precise transport and sharing of the cyclotron's output.

ISAC and ARIEL Rare-Isotope Facilities

The Isotope Separator and Accelerator (ISAC) facility at TRIUMF, operational since 1999, serves as the primary infrastructure for producing and delivering low-energy rare-isotope beams through proton-induced reactions on thick targets bombarded by beams from the 520 MeV cyclotron. Isotopes are generated via spallation and fission processes, followed by thermalization in the target, ionization, and mass separation using a high-resolution magnetic separator to purify the beams for delivery at energies up to 60 keV. This low-energy beam delivery supports precision experiments, such as those at the TITAN ion trap, enabling studies of atomic and nuclear properties without acceleration. ISAC-II extends these capabilities with a superconducting linear accelerator that re-accelerates the purified rare-isotope s to energies up to 1.8 MeV per atomic mass unit, facilitating higher-energy nuclear structure investigations. The linac consists of multiple cryomodules with superconducting radiofrequency cavities, providing efficient acceleration while minimizing beam losses, and has undergone upgrades to enhance beam quality and energy range for advanced experimental stations like TIGRESS. These improvements include optimized ion sources and charge-state breeding systems to increase beam intensity and versatility. The Advanced Rare Isotope Laboratory (), currently under completion as part of TRIUMF's 2025–2030 plan, complements ISAC by introducing parallel production methods to triple rare-isotope beam capacity. At its core is a 30 MeV superconducting linear accelerator (e-LINAC), operational since 2014, which drives photo-fission and photo-production in targets to yield neutron-rich isotopes not easily accessible via proton . A dedicated superconducting radiofrequency linac then accelerates these beams, with full integration targeted for 2027 to enable up to 5000 hours of rare-isotope beam delivery annually by 2029. Integrated operations across ISAC and feature advanced beam switching via the cyclotron's proton beamlines and the e-LINAC, allowing simultaneous delivery from up to three high-power targets— one for ISAC spallation and two for ARIEL photo-fission and proton-induced production. Versatile ion sources, including forced electron-beam ion sources for charge breeding, and robust high-power targets capable of handling megawatt-level beams ensure efficient isotope extraction and acceleration. This setup supports multi-user access with automated tuning and consolidated controls for seamless transitions between production modes. Initial operations of the Isotope and Accelerator Mass-spectrometry Initiative (IAMI) are scheduled for 2026, incorporating advanced isotope handling and mass spectrometry capabilities to enhance rare-isotope research and production efficiency within the ARIEL-ISAC ecosystem.

Centre for Molecular and Materials Science

The Centre for Molecular and Materials Science (CMMS) at TRIUMF provides Canadian and international researchers with intense, spin-polarized beams of positive and negative muons (μ⁺ and μ⁻) as well as lithium-8 (⁸Li) ions, enabling microscopic studies of matter through specialized spectroscopic techniques. These beams are implanted into materials to probe local magnetic, electronic, and structural properties at the atomic scale, supporting investigations into condensed matter physics and materials development. The facility operates within TRIUMF's cyclotron infrastructure, delivering beams to dedicated experimental stations for user-driven experiments. A primary technique at CMMS is muon spin rotation, relaxation, and resonance (μSR), which utilizes low-energy surface muons (typically 4.1 MeV ) to act as sensitive local probes of and dynamics in materials. TRIUMF's μSR beamlines, including the operational M15 and M20 surface muon channels and the recently commissioned M9A, allow s to penetrate up to 180 mg/cm² into samples, making them ideal for studying thin films and bulk such as superconductors and magnetically ordered systems. For instance, μSR has revealed magnetic properties in kagome metals like Fe₁₋ₓCoₓSn and quantum spin liquids in compounds such as Yb₂Be₂GeO₇, providing insights into exotic electronic states. Sample environments support extreme conditions, including temperatures down to millikelvin in dilution refrigerators, up to 4 T, and pressures up to 2.5 GPa via the forthcoming M9H decay muon . Complementing μSR, the β-NMR (beta-detected ) technique at CMMS employs hyperpolarized ⁸Li⁺ ions, implanted at low energies to depths of 20–200 nm, for high-resolution studies of surfaces, interfaces, and thin films. This method detects nuclear spin through asymmetric , offering sensitivity up to 10 orders of magnitude greater than conventional NMR, which enables atomic-level characterization of electronic environments in nanostructures and high-temperature superconductors. The β-NMR , integrated with TRIUMF's ISAC facility, supports experiments on localized magnetism and dynamics near material interfaces. Applications of these techniques extend to developing next-generation materials, including cathodes where μSR identifies magnetic transitions in Li-based compounds that influence charge-discharge efficiency, and quantum computing components such as novel superconductors probed for coherence and pairing mechanisms. Beam time is allocated through competitive proposals, with experiments typically running in multi-day shifts under controlled environments like variable-temperature cryostats or high-vacuum chambers to accommodate diverse samples from semiconductors to molecular systems. Facility upgrades have enhanced CMMS capabilities, including the 2006–2012 rebuild of the M20 beamline for higher muon flux via improved optics and dual end-stations, and the 2015 replacement of M15 quadrupole power supplies for stable beam delivery. The M9A beamline, commissioned in 2022, features a new radiation-resistant and ultra-fast kicker for increased efficiency, while the M9H decay channel, operational since 2024, boosts penetration for high-pressure studies. In β-NMR, a high parallel-field spectrometer installed in 2023 extends capabilities up to 9 T, improving resolution for thin-film experiments. These enhancements collectively increase and flux, enabling more precise detection and broader access for materials research.

Nuclear Medicine and Isotope Production Facilities

TRIUMF's nuclear medicine and isotope production facilities are centered in the Radiochemistry Annex (RCA) and include dedicated cyclotrons operated in partnership with BWX Technologies, Inc., such as two TR-30 cyclotrons for gas and solid targets and the TR-13 cyclotron for lower-energy productions. These systems support the irradiation of targets to generate biomedical and therapeutic radionuclides, with beamlines delivering protons from the main 520 MeV cyclotron to dedicated stations for efficient isotope yield. Hot cells equipped with 6-inch lead shielding and robotic manipulators handle high-radioactivity processing, while pneumatic rabbit systems enable rapid, safe transport of irradiated targets to processing areas, minimizing decay losses for short-lived isotopes. The small medical cyclotron facility, one of the world's largest producers of strontium-82 (Sr-82), generates this key radionuclide for rubidium-82 generators used in high-resolution cardiac PET imaging. The laboratories, including Research Labs 1 and 2 (RCR-1 and RCR-2) and GMP-capable production labs 005 and 007, facilitate tracer development and PET support through automated synthesis modules and analytical tools like ICP-MS and gamma spectrometers. These labs process isotopes for isolation and labeling, developing novel tracers such as -labeled for cancer metabolic and system xC- studies. They pioneer production of carbon-11 (C-11) and (F-18) for precise PET scanning in diagnosing conditions like cancer and neurological disorders, supplying tracers to collaborations with the (UBC) and BC Cancer. Key isotopes produced include diagnostic agents like (I-123) for and imaging, (In-111) for targeted SPECT imaging, (Tc-99m) via of molybdenum-100, and germanium-68 (Ge-68) for gallium-68 generators. Therapeutic radionuclides such as (Ac-225) are generated through on the 520 MeV , supporting targeted alpha for cancers. Production volumes enable global impact, with facilities treating approximately 35,000 patients weekly through commercial distributions of Sr-82, I-123, and others, while preclinical quantities of emerging theranostics like (Cu-64) and zirconium-89 (Zr-89) aid research into . The Applied Technology Group (ATG), a 30-person team within the RCA, oversees setups using custom-manufactured targets for both routine production and research applications, including support for clinical trials through just-in-time delivery and . ATG's expertise in operation ensures 24/7 availability, integrating with hot cells and rabbit lines to process isotopes like palladium-103 (Pd-103) for . Under the 2025-2030 strategic plan, TRIUMF is expanding capacity via the Institute for Advanced Isotopes (IAMI), a 2500 m² facility with a TR-24 medical set to operationalize in 2026 for GMP-certified production of F-18 and next-generation . This includes scaling Ac-225 production to monthly generator outputs of ~100 MBq by enhancing thorium target processing and symbiotic beams, targeting improved therapies for metastatic cancers like and pancreatic through targeted alpha emitters. A 1A refurbishment during the 2026 shutdown will boost overall yields, aligning with $399.8 million in federal funding to triple rare availability for cancer treatments by 2029.

Computing and Specialized Support Facilities

TRIUMF hosts the ATLAS Canadian Tier-1 Data Centre, a critical component of the worldwide distributed computing infrastructure for the ATLAS experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This facility provides substantial computing capacity for processing and storing vast amounts of raw collision data generated by the ATLAS detector, enabling physicists to analyze high-energy particle interactions and reconstruct events. As one of ten international Tier-1 centres, it contributes approximately 10% of the global Tier-1 resources dedicated to ATLAS computing, supporting data-intensive tasks such as simulation, reconstruction, and analysis across the collaboration. The TRIUMF-ATLAS team shared in the 2025 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, awarded to the ATLAS collaboration for its precise measurements of the Higgs boson's properties and explorations of physics beyond the Standard Model. TRIUMF operates dedicated proton and neutron irradiation facilities to support materials testing and radiation hardness studies essential for , , and high-energy physics applications. The Proton Irradiation Facility (PIF), located in the Meson Hall, utilizes Beamline 2C1 (BL2C1) to deliver proton beams with energies ranging from 5 MeV to 105 MeV, primarily for single-event effect (SEE) characterization of electronic components and detectors. These beams simulate radiation environments encountered in space and terrestrial settings, allowing researchers to evaluate device reliability under proton-induced damage. Complementing this, the Neutron Irradiation Facility (NIF) provides neutron beams at multiple sites, including the TRIUMF Neutron Facility (TNF) with energies from thermal to 400 MeV, facilitating studies on neutron-induced degradation in materials and semiconductors. TRIUMF's scientific computing efforts integrate machine learning and quantum computing to advance simulations in particle and nuclear physics. The Scientific Computing team develops tools for beam transport optimization and large-scale data handling, while pilot projects apply machine learning algorithms to enhance data analysis efficiency in experiments. In a notable collaboration with the Perimeter Institute and D-Wave Systems, researchers have pioneered a quantum-AI hybrid model that accelerates particle collision simulations, improving speed, accuracy, and energy efficiency for LHC upgrade preparations. This approach leverages quantum annealing for generative modeling of calorimeter interactions, demonstrating potential for scalable quantum-enhanced computations in high-energy physics. Additional support facilities at TRIUMF include dedicated areas for detector testing and computations, bolstering experimental and modeling capabilities. Detector testing leverages the infrastructure to assess radiation tolerance of prototypes developed for and , ensuring robust performance in extreme environments. The Theory Department provides computational resources for nuclear and particle theory, employing first-principles methods to model subatomic interactions and support interpretive frameworks for TRIUMF's accelerator-based experiments. These resources facilitate high-performance simulations that integrate with broader computing ecosystems, aiding in the design and analysis of complex physical phenomena.

Research Programs

Particle Physics Experiments

TRIUMF plays a pivotal role in by contributing to major international experiments that probe fundamental particles and forces, particularly through its expertise in accelerator-based research and detector technologies. The laboratory supports efforts to understand oscillations and properties, leveraging its high-intensity proton beams to produce secondary particles essential for these studies. Canadian researchers at TRIUMF lead key components in collaborations hosted at facilities like J-PARC in and in , ensuring precise measurements that advance the and search for new physics. In the T2K long-baseline experiment, TRIUMF scientists have been instrumental since the project's inception, providing critical contributions to the design, , and operation at J-PARC. This includes developing optical transition radiation detectors for proton beam monitoring and reducing flux systematics, which enabled T2K's 2013 evidence for muon-to-electron oscillations—a breakthrough hinting at in the sector. TRIUMF also supports data analysis, network infrastructure, and slow control systems, enhancing the experiment's sensitivity to properties over its 295 km baseline to the detector. Ongoing upgrades, backed by TRIUMF's computing resources, continue to refine these measurements for future precision. TRIUMF leads the Canadian contingent in the ALPHA collaboration at CERN's Antiproton Decelerator, focusing on studies to test matter- symmetries. The ALPHA-2 apparatus, enhanced with TRIUMF-developed techniques, has trapped and studied antihydrogen atoms, enabling comparisons to hydrogen. The ALPHA-g experiment, utilizing a vertical magnetic trap and a TRIUMF-built detector, achieved the first direct observation of antihydrogen's gravitational free-fall in 2023, confirming it falls downward like ordinary matter within experimental precision. In 2025, ALPHA reported the simultaneous observation of both hyperfine components of the 1S–2S transition in trapped , providing high-precision data on 's spectral properties and limiting deviations from . These results underscore TRIUMF's advancements in antimatter manipulation for fundamental symmetry tests. Domestically, TRIUMF develops advanced detectors for precision particle measurements, including silicon strip trackers integral to upgrades like the ATLAS Inner Tracker at the LHC. These all-silicon systems, constructed with TRIUMF's expertise in sensor integration and mechanical support, enable high-resolution tracking of charged particles in high-luminosity environments, as demonstrated in studies. TRIUMF's 520 MeV supplies intense proton beams—up to 200 μA—to produce pions and s via targets, generating secondary beams for low-energy precision experiments on fundamental interactions, such as rare kaon decays that probe flavor violation. This beam infrastructure supports both domestic R&D and international beam requests, bridging high-energy and precision frontiers.

Nuclear Physics Experiments

TRIUMF's experiments leverage rare beams produced at the ISAC facility to probe the structure, reactions, and astrophysical relevance of atomic nuclei. These studies employ advanced detection systems and traps to measure properties of short-lived isotopes, providing insights into nuclear forces and the synthesis of elements in stars. Key efforts focus on precision , beta-decay processes, ultracold dynamics, and low-energy reaction cross-sections, contributing to broader understandings of nuclear stability and cosmic evolution. The TITAN (TRIUMF's Ion Traps for Atomic and Nuclear science) facility utilizes Penning traps to perform high-precision mass measurements of exotic isotopes, enabling detailed investigations of nuclear structure far from stability. By comparing cyclotron frequencies of ions in , TITAN achieves relative mass uncertainties below 10^{-8} for half-lives as short as milliseconds, revealing binding energies and shell effects in neutron-rich nuclei. In 2025, TITAN published results on mass measurements of isotopes (^{74-76}Sr), confirming previous data and informing models of nuclear deformation, as well as studies on and isotopes that highlight symmetries. These measurements support theoretical frameworks for by refining predictions of beta-decay pathways. The BeEST experiment examines neutrino properties through electron energy spectra in beta decays of trapped radioactive ions, setting direct constraints on the spatial extent of neutrino wavepackets. Using beams of short-lived isotopes like ^{8}Li from ISAC, BeEST detects recoil ions to infer neutrino emission characteristics, addressing uncertainties in quantum wave descriptions. In February 2025, BeEST reported the first direct lower limit on the neutrino wavepacket size, exceeding 6.2 \times 10^{-12} meters—about 5% of an atomic diameter—based on energy width measurements from over 10^6 decays, tightening bounds by orders of magnitude compared to prior oscillation data. This result, published in Nature, advances tests of Lorentz invariance and neutrino coherence in nuclear processes. The BeEST collaboration held its 2025 meeting at TRIUMF in May, discussing upgrades for heavier isotopes to further probe neutrino mass eigenstates. The TUCAN (TRIUMF Ultracold Advanced ) project develops an intense source of ultracold s (UCNs) via superfluid conversion of s, targeting a search for the (nEDM) to sensitivities below 10^{-28} e·cm. UCNs, with energies around 100 neV, are confined in traps to measure energy shifts in , probing beyond the . In June 2025, TUCAN achieved first successful UCN production, yielding densities suitable for nEDM experiments and validating the source design for future high-precision runs. This facility enhances by linking neutron properties to fundamental symmetries. In , TRIUMF measures reaction rates critical for using facilities like TUDA and , which simulate low-energy charged-particle captures in stellar environments. TUDA employs thin targets and detectors to determine cross-sections for reactions such as proton captures on light nuclei, directly influencing models of burning in stars. DRAGON facilitates radiative alpha and proton captures on rare isotopes, providing data on resonances that normalize stellar rates—for instance, the ^{12}C(α,γ)^{16}O reaction, pivotal for carbon production in burning. These experiments integrate into computational simulations, reducing uncertainties in element abundance predictions from to .

Materials and Life Sciences Applications

TRIUMF's research in materials science leverages muon spin rotation (μSR) and β-detected nuclear magnetic resonance (β-NMR) techniques to probe quantum materials, particularly superconductors and battery technologies. In superconductors, μSR has been instrumental in measuring magnetic penetration depths and detecting weak magnetism in unconventional systems, such as high-temperature cuprates and iron-based materials, revealing insights into vortex lattices and time-reversal symmetry breaking. For instance, μSR studies on FeSe_{1-x}S_{x} identified two distinct superconducting states with broken time-reversal symmetry, advancing understanding of quantum phase transitions in strongly correlated systems. Similarly, β-NMR applications in battery research focus on lithium-ion dynamics; measurements in thin films of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) electrolytes have quantified diffusion rates and local environments, aiding the development of solid-state batteries with improved ion transport. These techniques provide microscopic resolution into charge carrier behavior, contributing to enhanced energy storage materials without relying on bulk averaging methods. In , TRIUMF develops for cancer diagnosis and treatment, emphasizing targeted alpha therapy (TAT) with isotopes like (Ac-225). Ac-225-based agents deliver high-energy alpha particles to cells, minimizing damage to healthy tissue, and have shown promise in early clinical studies for treating resistant tumors. Production at TRIUMF's cyclotrons has scaled to clinically relevant quantities, supporting trials in collaboration with institutions like BC Cancer, where Ac-225 conjugates enable precise tumor targeting and imaging. Complementary theranostic pairs, such as Ac-225/Ac-226, allow simultaneous diagnosis and therapy, improving outcomes in solid tumors. These efforts have transformed radiotherapy by increasing the , with like F-18-FDG used in PET scans to stage cancers and monitor metabolic activity. Life sciences applications at TRIUMF extend to and isotope tracers, enabling non-invasive studies of biological processes. β-NMR with probes like ^{8}Li^{+} facilitates ultrasensitive analysis of metal interactions in biomolecules at physiological conditions, revealing dynamics in proteins and membranes relevant to disease mechanisms. Isotope tracers, including zirconium-89 (Zr-89) and carbon-11 (C-11), support PET-MRI imaging for brain disorders like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, tracking and activity to inform diagnostics. These tracers have been applied in research and studies, providing quantitative insights into cellular-level changes without invasive procedures. TRIUMF's innovations in 2024 highlighted milestones in medical isotope commercialization, including the acquisition of spinoff ARTMS Inc. by Telix Pharmaceuticals, which accelerates Ac-225 and other TAT agents toward market. Partnerships with BWXT Medical distributed nearly 2 million patient doses annually, while funding through the Canadian Medical Isotope Ecosystem supported new production projects. These collaborations, involving universities and pharma companies, have driven clinical translation of , enhancing global access to cancer therapies.

Collaborations and Community

International Scientific Collaborations

TRIUMF serves as the Canadian lead laboratory for the at CERN's (LHC), coordinating contributions from seven Canadian universities and operating the ATLAS Tier-1 computing centre, which handles massive data volumes from particle collisions. The ATLAS collaboration, including TRIUMF's team, received the 2025 for precise measurements and explorations of new physics phenomena, shared among over 13,000 researchers from ATLAS, CMS, ALICE, and LHCb. This role underscores TRIUMF's coordination in international efforts, supported by long-standing agreements with , including protocols on the High-Luminosity LHC and rare-isotope beams. In May 2025, signed a statement of intent with CERN to further strengthen scientific collaboration in and related fields. In neutrino and astroparticle physics, TRIUMF contributes to experiments at SNOLAB, including SNO+ for searches, nEXO and HALO for detection, and DEAP/DarkSide-20k and for studies using liquid argon detectors. These efforts leverage TRIUMF's expertise in , photodetector development, and detector technologies to advance understanding of fundamental particles and cosmology. TRIUMF participates in the T2K experiment, a long-baseline study in , where protons from J-PARC produce a beam detected 295 kilometers away at , enabling measurements of neutrino flavor changes and hints of . Bilateral ties include the sixth TRIUMF-KEK Scientific held on January 29-30, 2025, at KEK's campus, fostering exchanges in particle and under a longstanding strategic partnership. In 2024, TRIUMF and France's CNRS established the NPAT joint laboratory for , , and accelerator technologies, based in to unite Canadian and French communities on exotic nuclei and stellar processes. In July 2025, TRIUMF collaborated with Canada's Perimeter Institute and D-Wave on a quantum-AI hybrid approach to enhance particle collision simulations for high-energy physics research. TRIUMF maintains over 30 formal work and research agreements with leading global institutions, such as and , positioning it as a key coordinator in multinational projects that enhance 's role in high-energy physics.

TRIUMF Users' Group and Education

The TRIUMF Users' Group (TUG) serves as an advocacy for the laboratory's user community, comprising scientists, engineers, and researchers with a keen interest in leveraging TRIUMF's facilities for advanced experiments. Established to foster dialogue on scientific, technical, and policy matters, TUG represents over 1,000 annual users from and abroad, facilitating their engagement through annual general meetings (AGMs) where beam time allocations and facility updates are discussed. These meetings, often held in conjunction with TRIUMF's scientific workshops, allow users to provide input on operational priorities and address concerns via an executive committee that liaises directly with laboratory management. Access to TRIUMF's resources operates on a competitive, proposal-based model designed for researchers from Canadian universities, international institutions, and collaborative consortia. Proposals are evaluated by specialized committees, such as the Materials and Molecular Sciences Experimental Evaluation Committee (MMS-EEC), which assess scientific merit, feasibility, and resource needs before allocating beam time in shifts typically lasting 5-7 days. This system supports over 500 on-site staff and students, including postdoctoral fellows and graduate trainees, who collaborate closely with visiting users to execute experiments across particle and domains. TRIUMF's educational initiatives emphasize hands-on training for emerging scientists, including programs that integrate students into real-world environments. Key offerings include the TRI-Institute Summer School on Elementary Particles (TRISEP), a biennial program for students exposed to , and the Graduate Instrumentation and Detector School (GRIDS), which provides practical experience in nuclear, particle, and . Complementing these are efforts like the YES Fellowship, a six-week summer program for high school , and broader K-12 engagement through lectures and internships to inspire STEM interest. In 2024-2025, TRIUMF launched the "50 Years, 50 Stories" initiative to commemorate the laboratory's first beam in 1974, featuring multimedia narratives on its history and impact to engage students and the public in subatomic science. TRIUMF advances community impact through dedicated diversity, equity, and inclusion (EDI) efforts, including an EDI Committee and a rolling that embeds principles to reflect Canada's demographic diversity. Under the 2025-2030 Implementation Plan, recruitment strategies prioritize highly qualified personnel (HQP) development, training over 150 students annually via a competitive co-op program to build Canada's STEM talent pipeline while attracting global experts. These initiatives enhance user engagement and foster inclusive collaborations, with international users comprising a significant portion of the community.

References

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