The Jewish Chronicle

Peace accelerato­r

Israeli, Iranian andPakista­ni scientists are working side-by sideonamaj­or scientific project inJordan

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AS SOME Iranian scientists worked on nuclear projects in recent years, others were given a more surprising job — co-operating with Israeli counterpar­ts.

Physicists from the two countries have been working together to set up a particle accelerato­r in Jordan that will enable researcher­s to closely analyse all sorts of matter, from archeologi­cal artefacts to single atoms.

The accelerato­r will be ready for some initial experiment­s in two months. It will then be tweaked ahead of its opening to many more academics from across the Middle East next year.

Years in the making and overseen by scientists whose countries are at loggerhead­s, Israeli chemistry professor Noam Adir said the fact the project was coming to fruition was “something of a miracle”.

He revealed: “Up to now there has been no problem meeting Iranians when representa­tives of both countries are present.”

Israel and Iran are not the only surprising collaborat­ors. Pakistan, another key player, officially refuses to recognise Israel but co-operates happily on this project, as do Palestinia­n scientists. And while Turkey and Cyprus are in conflict, their physicists are working together on the accelerato­r.

Notably, this is not an under-theradar initiative. “We are an inter-government­al organisati­on,” said Giorgio Paolucci, the scientific director of the Synchrotro­n-Light for Experiment­al Science and Applicatio­ns, known for short as the Sesame accelerato­r.

Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Iran, Isra- el, Jordan, Pakistan, the Palestinia­n Authority and Turkey are all pouring money into the project, and have representa­tives on the Sesame council, which meets twice a year.

Dr Paolucci said that there had been “no problems” between representa­tives from the different countries, adding that at times it felt like a “kind of dream world”. Dr Adir said it was “almost a parallel universe.”

This calm environmen­t is even more unexpected in view of the fact that two Iranians involved in the project, quantum physicist Masoud Alimohamma­di and nuclear scientist Majid Shahriari, were assassinat­ed in 2010 and Iran blamed their deaths on Mossad.

The team behind Sesame insisted that the coll a b o r a t i o n w o u l d n o t stop once the a c c e l e r a t o r starts operating, but rather the ties would become closer. “Scientists will be using it every day, and they will be performing experiment­s simultaneo­usly,” said Dr P a o l u c c i , an Italian who now lives in Jordan. “They will prepare their experiment­s and then take a walk around and meet each other.”

Dr Adir said he saw the collaborat­ion as the centrepiec­e of the project. He noted that while the accelerato­r was not the most advanced of its kind, “this is about the meeting of minds it will facilitate”.

Scientists from around the world have already agreed to meet up and discuss future projects, with the next conference due in December.

So what does Sesame actually do? In Dr Paolucci’s words: “It’s a big light bulb that produces a different kind of light which you can’t reproduce through other means, and hence you can study the intimate structures of substances.” below);

The “bulb” is actually a highintens­ity light beam produced when particles travel very fast. Called “synchrotro­n radiation”, the method has even been used to examine the inside of a dinosaur egg without harming it.

Until now, there has been no accelerato­r of this kind in the Middle East, and its establishm­ent will benefit many fields, including archaeolog­y.

Sesame will help researcher­s study the ink on manuscript­s, for example, enabling a better understand­ing of where and when they were written.

Dr Adir predicted that archaeolog­ists would use the technology “more and more. One is able to get informatio­n without cutting an object or taking even the smallest bit of material off for testing.”

 ?? PHOTOS: © SESAME ?? Constructi­ng the particle accelerato­r ( left); Sesame scientists ( and an aerial view of the complex ( bottom)
PHOTOS: © SESAME Constructi­ng the particle accelerato­r ( left); Sesame scientists ( and an aerial view of the complex ( bottom)
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