81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber - meaning and definition. What is 81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber
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What (who) is 81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber - definition


81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber         
  • The 81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber on display at CERN.
  • Last photograph taken with the 81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber. The mysterious presence of a fish casts serious doubt on the origin of all the bubbles and reflects physicists good sense of humour. The photo originates from the retirement celebration of this chamber held at CERN on 8 April 1971.
PARTICLE DETECTOR BUILT IN FRANCE, 1960
Saclay Bubble Chamber, 81 cm
The 81 cm Saclay Bubble Chamber was a liquid hydrogen bubble chamber built at Saclay, in collaboration with the École Polytechnique (Orsay), to study particle physics. The team led by Bernard Gregory completed the construction of the chamber in 1960 and later it was moved to CERN and installed at the Proton Synchrotron (PS).
30 cm Bubble Chamber (CERN)         
  • Main body of the 30 cm Bubble Chamber at CERN.
CERN HIGH-ENERGY PARTICLE DETECTOR
10 cm Bubble Chamber (CERN); 10 cm Bubble Chamber
The 30 cm Bubble Chamber, prototyped as a 10 cm Bubble Chamber, was a particle detector used to study high-energy physics at CERN.
Bubble chamber         
  • adj=on}} [[liquid hydrogen]] bubble chamber, in 1954.
  • A bubble chamber recording from [[CERN]]
VESSEL FILLED WITH A SUPERHEATED TRANSPARENT LIQUID
Bubble-chamber detector; Bubble Chamber
A bubble chamber is a vessel filled with a superheated transparent liquid (most often liquid hydrogen) used to detect electrically charged particles moving through it. It was invented in 1952 by Donald A.