PREFACE The CAARI 2002: Seventeenth International Conference on the Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry was held on the campus of the University of North Texas November 12-16, 2002. The major sponsors of the conference were the National Science Foundation, The U.S. Department of Energy and the University of North Texas. The conference is a topical conference of the American Physical Society sponsored through the Division of Nuclear Physics. An Industrial Exhibit Show composed of 40 companies that have products of interest to the accelerator community was held in parallel to the conference for the first two days. Approximately 800 accelerator scientists from 50 countries attended the conference. There were 508 invited papers that were distributed in 86 each, fourhour sessions. There was a poster session Friday night with 60 posters on display. The conference opened with four plenary speakers: T. Fastermann from the Technical University of Muenchen who discussed Interdisciplinary Research at the Muenchen Tandem. The next speaker was T. Huthwelker from (SUNY) Albany. In the talk an overview was given on how RBS can be used to help assay global warming problems. Next was D. Ackermann from GSI who gave an excellent presentation on the Synthesis of Super Heavy Elements. The final plenary speaker was Peter Sigmund who gave us the latest work on the Binary Theory of Electronic Stopping. and posters covered such topics as: Ion Implantation, (30 papers in these proceedings) Radiation Processing, Targetry, Detectors and Spectrometers, Energy Loss, Clusters, Free Electron Lasers and Non Destructive Analysis. In addition to the sessions mentioned above, we organized and conducted a Medical Symposium in parallel with the conference. This symposium consisted of 7, four-hour sessions on the production and use of Medical Radioisotopes. The sessions were composed of 50 speakers, who are probably some of the best in the world on the subject matter covered. 20 medical papers appear in these proceedings. The editors would like to thank the major sponsoring agencies, namely: The United States Department of Energy, The National Science Foundation and University of North Texas for their continuing support of this conference series. Thanks are also due to the industrial sponsors. They not only helped financially but also provided two complete days of industrial exhibits that added greatly to the total conference experience that each participant enjoyed. We are also indebted to the program and advisory committees for the excellent slate of invited speakers whose presentations were given at the conference. Our gratitude also goes out to the 90 session chairpersons and co-chairpersons who not only helped to organize many of the sessions but also conducted the sessions at the conference. The editors now have about 500 referees that can be called on to help with the refereeing of the papers. We wish to especially thank the individuals that helped us referee papers for these proceedings. With faxes, email and overnight mail we accomplished this task rapidly with the outstanding contribution of these referees. As has been the case in most of our previous conferences, Accelerator Based Atomic Physics had the most sessions. There were 14 sessions that dealt directly with Atomic Physics. 50 papers in Atomic Physics are published in these proceedings. There were also 13 poster papers that dealt with Accelerator Based Atomic Physics. There were 6 sessions and 9 poster papers that dealt generally with Accelerator Technology. These papers covered such topics as New Accelerators, Beam Handling Systems, Ion Sources, Detectors, Spectrometers, Magnets, Control Programs, etc. Radioactive Beams and Nuclear Physics were the topics for 8 sessions which were very well attended. 28 papers on Nuclear Physics appear in these proceedings. There were 14 sessions and 24 posters that dealt generally with ion beam analysis. These papers covered such topics as: Rutherford Backscattering Analysis, Particle Induced X-Ray Emission, Elastic Recoil Detectors, Nuclear Reaction Analysis, Accelerator Mass Spectrometry and Activation Analysis. Thirty-seven papers on IBA are published in these proceedings. Additional sessions We wish to thank the administrative staff, students and professors at the University of North Texas for the monumental effort of helping us put the conference together and following through with the final publication of these proceedings. The person, without question, who did the administrative work, compiled the information, and our website for the conference, was Margaret Hall. Margaret was particularly interested in seeing to it that the participants were wined and dined and generally had a good time in Denton. From the participant point of view that is an admirable goal. We also wish to thank Andrea Hall, Courtney Molchan and Victor Breton. We wish to thank all of the physics graduate students for helping with the slide projectors. xix We are indebted to Jonathan Reynolds of the UNT Center for Media Production, who took all of the pictures that appear in the proceedings. UNT in 1974. It is not easy to bring 800 visitors onto a campus during the fall semester and provide classrooms, etc. for the meeting. Without the total support of the University, this would not be possible. Finally we wish to thank the UNT administration and faculty for the support that has been given this conference series since the first time it was held at The next conference in this series will take place on the campus of UNT in Fall 2004. xx
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