The Soreq Applied Research Accelerator Facility (SARAF) - Overview, Research Programs and Future Plans
Israel Mardor (1,2), Ofer Aviv (2), Marilena Avrigeanu (3), Dan, Berkovits (2), Adi Dahan (2), Timo Dickel (4,5), Ilan Eliyahu (2), Moshe Gai, (6), Inbal Gavish-Segev (2), Shlomi Halfon (2), Michael Hass (7), Tsviki, Hirsh (2), Boaz Kaiser (2), Daniel Kijel (2), Arik Kreisel (2)

TL;DR
SARAF is a versatile nuclear research facility in Israel, combining a superconducting linear accelerator with ongoing and future programs in nuclear physics, astrophysics, and medical applications, with significant recent results and broad research plans.
Contribution
This paper provides a comprehensive overview of SARAF's technical design, current research achievements, and future research directions, highlighting its unique capabilities and scientific potential.
Findings
Achieved world-leading neutron yield with Liquid-Lithium Target
Generated significant scientific results in nuclear physics and astrophysics
Outlined extensive future research plans across multiple disciplines
Abstract
The Soreq Applied Research Accelerator Facility (SARAF) is under construction in the Soreq Nuclear Research Center at Yavne, Israel. When completed at the beginning of the next decade, SARAF will be a user facility for basic and applied nuclear physics, based on a 40 MeV, 5 mA CW proton/deuteron superconducting linear accelerator. Phase I of SARAF (SARAF-I, 4 MeV, 2 mA CW protons, 5 MeV 1 mA CW deuterons) is already in operation, generating scientific results in several fields of interest. The main ongoing program at SARAF-I is the production of 30 keV neutrons and measurement of Maxwellian Averaged Cross Sections (MACS), important for the astrophysical s-process. The world leading Maxwellian epithermal neutron yield at SARAF-I ( epithermal neutrons/sec), generated by a novel Liquid-Lithium Target (LiLiT), enables improved precision of known MACSs, and new measurements…
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