| As stated above,
ECT* originated from the combined efforts of the European scientific
community
of
nuclear physicists and
the scientific Institutions of the Autonomous Province of Trento
(P.A.T.) to set up a European theory centre, according to the
recommendations of the "community meeting" of October
1992, held at Orsay (France). The scientific community discussed
the idea of founding
a European Centre for around two years, also by means of ad-hoc
meetings and referendums in specialised magazines (Nuclear
Physics News), through which the goals of
the Centre
were defined with care, together with the human and financial
resources
necessary for its running. The project progressed
as set out below:
- Following the proposal (1990) of several
nuclear physicists from the Niels Bohr Institute, the Community
of European theoretical nuclear physicists was invited to
discuss the opportunity of founding a European (and in fact international)
Centre.
This idea was greeted with enthusiasm. After two years of public discussions and
appropriate
referendums, various groups
were invited to formulate specific proposals, and a Steering
Committee was nominated to evaluate them.
- Specific proposals were elaborated by groups in Denmark,
Holland, Italy (two proposals: one from INFN in Legnaro and
one from the nuclear physics group of
the Physics Department of Trento), and CERN.
- A careful scrutiny of various projects was undertaken. European
delegates convened in Orsay-Paris in 1992. Given
the scientific quality of the project, the logistics provided and the local
financial support assured, the nuclear physics community was practically unanimous in its choice of the Trento
project.
- The European Centre for Theoretical Studies in Nuclear Physics and Related
Areas (ECT*) was founded on behalf of the European nuclear physicists community,
by the Istituto Trentino di Cultura (ITC) in January 1993.
- In February 1996 a meeting of the European nuclear physics community was
convened to evaluate the first three years of activity of the Centre. ECT*
underwent a
critical review; an evaluation committee was elected and asked to produce an
evaluation report.
- In December 1996 the international evaluation of the Centre was completed
and the evaluation report produced. Since then steps have been taken to obtain
from European Institutions formal recognition of the European role of ECT*.
- The formal recognition of the European role of the Centre has been completed
by an agreement of mutual understanding with the European Science
Foundation (ESF) Associated Committee Nuclear Physics European Coordination
Committee (NuPECC), an agreement ratified by the ESF in autumn
1997.
- Bilateral agreements of collaboration
have been signed with the Russian-Nordic-British
Theory (RNBT) collaboration for Radioactive Nuclear
Beam Physics
(JINR-Dubna,
RRC-KI-Moscov; UiB-Bergen, NBI-Copenhagen, CTH/UiG-Göteborg;
SCNP U-Surrey-Guildford); the International Centre for Theoretical
Physics
(Trieste), the Physics Department
of the University of Adelaide, the Institute of Physics (Belgrade),
and the Physics Department of the University of Perugia (AMS Collaboration
with the Cosmion Laboratory,
Moscow).
- An important step in efforts to ensure direct support from European
National funding agencies was taken when representatives of the agencies of the three
largest
users of the Centre agreed to convene at ECT* to discuss the future funding.
At the meeting which was held in January 1998 the representatives of BMBF (Germany),
CEA and IN2P3 (France) and INFN (Italy) agreed to propose to their national
funding agencies that they provide a regular yearly contribution, in order to flank
the local
financial contribution. This was as an initial step of towards a broader
co-operative effort of the European nations participating in the field of nuclear
physics
and related areas. NuPECC has agreed to help in co-ordinating this European
effort.
The aims and goals of ECT* are defined in the founding STATUTES,
which also define the set of rules by which ECT* operates. The
ECT* STATUTES have been endorsed by the ESF.
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The Centre is based
two buildings in a large property called Villa
Tambosi: the Rustico (with 700 square metres of space), a
late XVIII century villa (1,200
square meters), and
a park. The property belongs to the Autonomous Province of Trento
(P.A.T.)
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