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Armenia, Perestroika, and Cosmic Rays

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  • Armenia, Perestroika, and Cosmic Rays

    Support Committee for Armenia's Cosmic Ray Division (SCACRD)
    January 28, 2010
    Joseph Dagdigian
    For questions contact Anahid Yeremian 650 926-4444, or
    Joseph Dagdigian 978 772-9417
    www.crdfriends.org

    ARMENIA, PERESTROIKA, AND COSMIC RAYS
    Scientific research in independent Armenia after the Cold War and the
    demise of USSR.
    -------------------------------------------- -------------------------

    By: Davide Sighele

    From: Osservatorio Balcani Osservatorio, English News, 13.10.2009

    http://www.osservatoriobalcani.org/art icle/articleview/11969/1/404/

    An interview with Ashot Chilingarian, director of Yerevan Physics Institute

    Since 2008, Ashot Chilingarian has been director of the Yerevan Physics
    Institute of Armenia. In 1993, he was appointed head of the Division for
    the Study of Cosmic Rays, energetic particles originating from outer
    space that enter Earth's atmosphere. The Yerevan Institute was founded
    in 1942. In the Soviet period, it had one of the largest electron ring
    accelerators in the world. Moreover, it founded two high-altitude Cosmic
    Ray Stations on Mount Aragats. Professor Chilingarian has dedicated his
    whole life to scientific research. In this interview, he reflects on the
    years of perestroika, the past and the future of scientific research in
    Armenia, and the projects on Mount Aragats.

    SIGHELE: You have worked in scientific research since 1971 and had a
    forty-year career spanning a period of time when the social context
    changed profoundly. The Soviet Union does not exist any more, Armenia is
    an independent state, and there was the war in Nagorno-Karabakh...how
    has all this influenced your work as scientist?

    CHILINGARIAN: My scientific career, if it is really scientific, did not
    depend heavily on the political situation. The drastic change since 1971
    has been the change in the distribution of scientific information. In
    the seventies, I travelled to Moscow's Lenin Library to read scientific
    journals because only one copy of each journal arrived in the Soviet
    Union. Now, I get all the articles I need directly from the screen of my
    computer and not from a bookshelf over my head. The exchange of
    scientific information, direct contacts with universities abroad,
    highly-improved peer reviewing procedures - these all made participation
    in scientific progress much easier and not crucially dependant on large
    funds.

    Sure, huge projects are connected to the political situation. However, I
    cannot claim that the unlimited funding we had in Soviet times always
    supported high-level scientific research. The scientific management was
    not the best and huge projects were often started and never finished.
    The most important thing for me was the opportunity to work on some of
    the world's biggest international collaborations.

    And, finally, it has been very important for me to have the chance to
    publish numerous papers in European and American scientific journals.
    Responding to reviewer comments - and also reviewing the papers send to
    me - helps me be aware of news results in the field, understand how to
    best present scientific results, and, finally, better recognize the
    methods and goals of scientific exploration.

    SIGHELE: The Yerevan Physics Institute, of which you are currently
    director, was founded in 1942. What were the main goals of the Institute
    in the past? What are the main goals of the Institute nowadays?

    CHILINGARIAN: In particular, we worked in the field of particle physics
    and started out in cosmic ray research before the first man-made
    accelerators were launched. The main goals of cosmic ray research was to
    explore the structure of matter, to investigate particle interactions
    with matter, and to build new particle detectors. There were also some
    military aspects: neutron multiplication, etc...

    On Mt. Aragats, we had on of the only earth-based laboratories for
    cosmic ray research. We were very strong in scientific instrumentation
    and our first director, world-famous physicist Artem Alikhanyan, was
    very respected and had very good connections, both among the world's
    best physicists and in Moscow's high-level offices.

    Nowadays, the mission of the institute is a source of debate. The Prime
    Minister of Armenia formed an International Commission of Experts to
    evaluate the competitiveness of the institute's scientific direction.
    The session of the Commission held at the end of July, 2009 included
    reports from the institute director and division leaders, visits to the
    institute's main facilities, and meetings with Armenian officials and
    institute scientists. The main conclusion was that YerPhI offers a
    unique basis for the further development of science and science
    intensive technologies in Armenia and that YerPhI should be transformed
    into the National Laboratory of Armenia.

    The Commission supports the cosmic ray research at Mt. Aragats and the
    work of the YerPhI groups at accelerators abroad in the research of
    nucleon structure. However, the proposed experiments in high-energy and
    nuclear physics at the home accelerators were declared not
    internationally competitive. The Commission recommends creation of a new
    dedicated facility (with a cyclotron for protons and heavy ions) to be
    used both for fundamental research in nuclear physics and for applied
    purposes, including medical treatment. This is a real challenge not only
    for the institute, but also for Armenia because this project will
    require funds and management skills on a scale which is quite large for
    Armenia at present.

    SIGHELE: The Soviet Union used to have a significant tradition in the
    scientific field - in physics, for example...but not only in physics. At
    the time of the tensions between the United State and the Soviet Union,
    the role of the scientific community was essential and the role of
    scientists was highly-esteemed in Soviet society. What about now?

    CHILINGARIAN: All the years of independent Armenian science and
    education have been neglected due to a scarcity of funds and poor
    management. The prestigious scientist of Soviet Armenia has turned into
    a beggar constantly asking the government for money. Therefore, students
    are not rushing into the sciences. The opportunity to go abroad, to work
    on international collaborations, and participate in conferences is now
    the prime motivator for students.

    SIGHELE: How has the Armenian scientific community-- if we can use this
    definition -- experienced the huge change that has happened in Europe
    and in the Soviet Union since the years of perestroika?

    CHILINGARIAN: The Armenian scientific community is dispersed. Scientists
    who get international grants, in addition to governmental funding,
    become part of international scientific progress. They have modern
    equipment, good connections abroad, repaired offices, students, and good
    prospects for the future. Unfortunately, the number of such scientists
    is not very large. The rest are still waiting on funds from government,
    and the question is whether they will be able to continue on course with
    modern research after a gap of lost years.

    SIGHELE: What are your personal memories of those years?

    CHILINGARIAN: In 1993, I became head of Cosmic Ray Division of YerPhI
    and it was real challenge. There was absolutely no funding (a monthly
    salary of ~5$), no electricity, no heating, no fuel. You could hardly
    survive in the city, so running high-altitude cosmic ray stations seemed
    like pure madness. Now, looking back on those years, I'm really
    surprised we did our research at Mt. Aragats. There were very difficult
    winter months with electricity cut-offs, but we never shut down the
    stations in all those years. Furthermore, we created new scientific
    infrastructure, bringing the Cosmic Ray Division to the foremost
    position in the world in modern research fields such as Space Weather
    and Thunderstorm phenomena. We have had very good temperatures in recent
    years and now, each year, we add some new research activity to our
    centre. This year, we added geomagnetic field measurements. Next year,
    we plan to start radio-monitoring of the sun, etc... So, I can sum it
    up: we survived and we became strong!

    SIGHELE: What is the relationship between scientific research and
    education in Armenia?

    CHILINGARIAN: In Soviet times, universities mainly taught and all
    research was concentrated in Research Centres like the Yerevan Physics
    Institute. Of course, students came to get diplomas and many scientists
    from the institute were teaching (I taught at Yerevan State University
    for 30 years). However, the Institute and University were under
    different umbrellas and were completely different organizations.

    Now, we need to join research and education. Every year, the students
    coming into the Institute are weaker and weaker because they did not get
    proper training in schools and universities. If we want to have a next
    generation of researchers, we need to urgently create education centres
    in institutions like YerPhI where expertise in modern science still
    remains. For three years now, the Cosmic Ray Division has operated a
    Space Education Centre. My students from the University come to YerPhI
    not only to listen lectures about cosmic rays and modern astrophysics,
    but also to work in laboratories for experimental physics, electronics,
    and data analysis which we have constructed specifically for educational
    purposes. This lets some students who like experimental physics work
    with modern equipment.

    SIGHELE: The Armenian diaspora played a crucial role in Armenia's
    independence. Is this true also for the Institute that you direct?

    CHILINGARIAN: In the year 2000, Armenian-Americans from California,
    Massachusetts and Michigan established a Cosmic Rays Division Friends
    Organization to support our research and our scientists. These
    initiatives were coordinated by Anahid Yeremian, a physicist from /SLAC
    National Accelerator Laboratory/ in Stanford. The funds they donated
    were transferred via special projects of the National Foundation of
    Science and High Technologies (NFSAT), chaired by Harut Karapetyan. In
    the beginning, we used the funds to support our scientists and students,
    to buy equipment, and to maintain operation of the high-altitude
    station. In recent years, these expenses have been covered by the CRD
    research grants and the diaspora funds have been primarily used for the
    repair of infrastructure and of buildings at high-altitude research
    stations.

    SIGHELE: How do you judge the level of scientific research in modern-day
    Armenia?

    CHILINGARIAN: Still high, but fast decaying.

    SIGHELE: What is your greatest fear for the future, and what is your
    greatest hope?

    CHILINGARIAN: The level of education is also decaying very quickly and
    I'm afraid we may not get the minimum amount of students required to
    continue our projects in the future.

    Our greatest hope is that there are students currently working at CRD
    who are really devoted to physics. Another hope is that the government
    finally seems to recognize that if they forget about science again, in a
    couple of years, there will be nothing to remember.

    COSMIC STATION
    -------------------------
    By Bettina Timm
    GERMANY, 2008
    Mount Aragats is the highest in Armenia. At a 3,500 metres height, what
    is left of a prestigious Soviet project is a cosmic rays monitoring
    station. This institute used to gather the best physics scholars with
    the goal of studying the secrets the universe is made of. Over a hundred
    women and men used to live there, looking for information on distant
    galaxies and the particles created by cosmic rays. Most researchers left
    when funds ran out with the demise of USSR. Yet, incredibly, some
    Armenian scholars still resist on this peak, living like ghosts in the
    old buildings, left in the cold, forgotten by the world and the
    institutions, only supported by their faith in science and passion for
    research.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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