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MSU begins work on key part of FRIB project

Steve Carmody
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Michigan Radio

It’s a cold day in East Lansing, but many are braving the cold to catch a glimpse of the next major step in a $730 million nuclear physics project. 

Over the next day or so, truckload after truckload of concrete is being poured into a deep pit on the Michigan State University’s campus.

At the bottom of the 65-foot-deep trench, the concrete will form an 8-foot slab that will support a key portion of the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.    

“That’s where the target needs to sit for the beam to interact with it properly,” says Brad Bull, the FRIB Conventional Facilities Division Director. He’s pointing deep into the pit, where workers are guiding pipes carrying the concrete, from mixing trucks above to the maze of steel bars below.

Credit Steve Carmody / Michigan Radio
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Michigan Radio
A pipeline is stretched from street level to the bottom of the pit 65 feet below.

“We want to make it a very rigid structure,” says Bull, “so that we don’t have cracking or defection of any kind.”

It’s been six years since MSU won the competition to design and build the FRIB project. It will be at least that long until the facility is actually built.

Once it is, MSU officials say it will become a major hub for nuclear research, and impact fields as diverse as medicine and astrophysics.   

Steve Carmody has been a reporter for Michigan Public since 2005. Steve previously worked at public radio and television stations in Florida, Oklahoma and Kentucky, and also has extensive experience in commercial broadcasting.
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