E
Input from the Community
A broad call for community input to the committee was issued in autumn 2003, shortly after the committee’s first meeting. The announcement was sent to several professional societies and appeared on the committee’s public Web page. It is excerpted below.
Dear Colleague,
The National Research Council (NRC) has established a committee called the Committee on Opportunities in High Magnetic Field Science (COHMAG). Its mission is to produce a report on the facilities available to scientists worldwide for doing experiments at high magnetic fields (i.e., at fields above 12 T), the current state of the many scientific disciplines that use high field magnets, the scientific opportunities these fields present, and the prospects for advances in related technologies. With this message COHMAG invites you to send it any information or opinions you feel should be taken into account during its deliberations. Specifically, how have high magnetic fields had an impact on your research? How have you taken advantage of facilities at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (NHMFL) or other high-field magnet centers? What new facilities or new capabilities would be most valuable to you? In what new areas of research are high magnetic fields likely to have a large impact? Any other comments?
Why did the NRC set up COHMAG? Earlier this year, the National Science Foundation (NSF) commissioned the NRC to generate a report on the scientific issues that surround the generation of high magnetic fields and their use in scientific research.
Given that the last major report covering this area was issued a decade and a half ago, a new study seems both appropriate and timely.
COHMAG is distributing this message to as many members of the high magnetic field community as possible because it wants to be sure that all voices have been heard before it issues its report. In order to reach as many people as possible, this message is being distributed using e-mail lists obtained from several different organizations, and they, inevitably, are overlapping. We apologize if you have received multiple copies of this message.
If you have information you want to transmit to COHMAG, please communicate it by e-mail to cohmag@nas.edu, and thank you for your help.
For COHMAG,
Peter B. Moore, Chair
Written responses were received from the following individuals:
Richard Beger, National Center for Toxicological Research
Oscar Bernhal, University of California at Los Angeles
Paul Canfield, Ames Research Center
Walter Chazin, Vanderbilt University
David Cowburn, New York Structural Biology Center
Jack Crow, NHMFL
Kwaku Dayie, Cleveland Clinic Foundation
M. Dolotenko, Russian Federal Nuclear Center
Thomas Erber, Illinois Institute of Technology
Bolzonia Fulvio, IMEM, Italy
Roy Goodrich, Louisiana State University
Jurgen Haase, Leibniz Institute, Dresden
Michael Hall, Texas A&M University
William Halperin, Northwestern University
Bruce Hammer, University of Minnesota
Fritz Herlach, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Seung Hong, Oxford Instruments
Robert Leif, Newport Instruments
Gerard Ludtka, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Gerhard Martinez, Grenoble High Magnetic Field Lab
Andrew Maverick, Louisiana State University
Craig Milling, Magnetic Resonance Microsensors
Martha Morton, University of Connecticut
William Moulton, NHMFL
Jan Musfeldt, University of Tennessee
Florin Neascu, International School of Choeifat, United Arab Emirates
Dean Peterson, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Neela Poorasingh, City University of New York
Al Redfield, Brandeis University
Jim Rhyne, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Larry Rubin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Joshua Telser, Roosevelt University
Cees Thieme, American Superconductor Corp.
Sheldon Schultz, University of California at San Diego
Horst Stormer, Columbia University
David Weber, University of Maryland
Roy Weinstein, University of Houston
Nicholas Zumbulyadis, Eastman Kodak