Physics Ph.D. Candidate Nicole Neveu Shares Career Path, Argonne Wakefield Accelerator (AWA) Research in Adopt-a-Physicist Program

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Physics Ph.D. candidate Nicole Neveu researches next-generation particle accelerator technology at the Argonne Wakefield Accelerator (AWA) facility at Argonne National Laboratory. This fall, for three weeks, she participated in the 鈥淎dopt-a-Physicist鈥 program led by physics honor society Sigma Pi Sigma.

Each night after finishing her research at AWA, Neveu would go home and get online to answer questions from sixth- and seventh-grade gifted students at Jewel Middle School in Aurora, Illinois, and ninth-graders at Oak Knoll High School in Summit, NJ: 鈥淲hat do you do at Argonne?鈥 鈥淗ow did you decide to be a physicist?鈥 鈥淲hat is the ratio of men to women at Argonne?鈥

One student asked, 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 more people study physics?鈥 To which Neveu replied, 鈥淲hy do you think that is?鈥

鈥淚t turned into an interesting conversation,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 told them that in some ways you have to do a large amount of work before you get to the good parts of physics. You need a certain amount of knowledge before it鈥檚 interesting. But I tried to make the point that it can be interesting!鈥

鈥淣icole is a very talented, hardworking student,鈥 said advisor , professor of physics, who focuses on the role of accelerator component design and materials in beam dynamics of particle accelerators. She was an accelerator operator before earning her Ph.D. at Northwestern University, and then was a research associate at Fermilab.

鈥淣icole also has received a lot of support from the community,鈥 Spentzouris continued. 鈥淪he鈥檚 done really well.鈥 Neveu was a teaching assistant for the Fundamentals of Accelerator Physics and Technology with Simulations and Measurements Lab class at the U.S. Particle Accelerator School. She received several financial awards to attend conferences, including the North American Particle Accelerator Conference and International Particle Accelerator Conference, and to take classes at USPAS. She also received an SCGSR award from the Department of Energy鈥檚 Office of Science Graduate Student Research program.

The focus of Neveu鈥檚 research at AWA so far has been the realization of fully-staged two-beam acceleration, a method whereby one electron beam helps to accelerate another, enabling more acceleration in a smaller space for a more compact accelerator. 鈥淭he highest energy accelerator at CERN is a 27-kilometer machine,鈥 Spentzouris noted. 鈥淥ne goal of accelerator research today is to make accelerators of a given energy smaller than they are now.鈥 Neveu helps to get the AWA accelerator working better: She contributed to the design specification for the two-beam accelerator鈥檚 kicker, a device that moves the beam onto a different path, and she does myriad odd jobs such as tuning the laser pulses by adjusting the optics. She earned her undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from University of Houston and has found both engineering and physics backgrounds helpful in her research.

Lately, she has been doing beam measurements and simulations of the particle trajectories through the accelerator. She has implemented an optimizer in the simulation, the purpose of which is to find the configuration of accelerator run parameters that produces the highest quality particle beam. She is partnering with Jeffrey Larson, an assistant computational mathematician at Argonne whose research centers on optimization algorithms and their implementation in software.

鈥淭he faster you can run a simulation, the more possibilities you can cover,鈥 Neveu said. 鈥淲e want to have a better idea of how the machine will behave so we know what experiments it can do, how it will perform.鈥

As a result of her work on testing the OPAL (Object Oriented Particle Accelerator Library) simulation framework being developed at the Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI) in Switzerland, she was invited to travel to Switzerland and work with the developers, which she did in May 2017.

She has had the opportunity to learn from a number of Illinois Tech people in addition to Spentzouris, including Thomas Wong, professor of electrical and computer engineering, and alumni Wei Gai (PHYS Ph.D. 鈥86), senior physicist and a group leader in the High Energy Physics (HEP) division at Argonne; John Power (PHYS Ph.D. 鈥96), accelerator physicist, HEP division; and Chunguang Jing (EE Ph.D. 鈥05), vice president of engineering, and Sergey Antipov (PHYS Ph.D. 鈥07), director of radiation sources department, at Euclid Labs, an accelerator R&D company that frequently partners with Argonne.

Neveu hopes to finish up at the end of next summer and find a position in accelerator physics, at a research institute or laboratory, such as Los Alamos National Laboratory. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e talking about building a new accelerator there,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 my dream project, because not many places are building new accelerators.鈥 After that, she may teach鈥攁nswering more questions from students about physics, and what it鈥檚 like to be a physicist.



Nicole Neveu



AWA experimental area, two-beam acceleration. / Photo courtesy of Scott Doran, Argonne National Laboratory.