Michel Talbot posted Control room of the Brookhaven 80-inch [6.7', 2m] Liquid Hydrogen Bubble Chamber showing some of the many instruments and controls required to monitor and precisely regulate the operation of the large, complex components and systems. Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York. 1963 The bubble chamber is a vessel filled with superheated transparent liquid hydrogen used to detect high-energy charged particles moving through it. Particle accelerator facilities like the Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) used bubble chambers extensively in the past, however they have now mostly been supplanted by wire chambers, spark chambers, drift chambers, and silicon detectors. The most significant discovery made with Brookhaven’s 80-inch chamber came in the first few months of its operation: the detection of the Ω⁻ particle, whose existence had been predicted by theoretical physicist Murray Gell-Mann. This finding supported the first attempt by physicists to organize the increasingly long list of subatomic particles into an orderly pattern, similar to that used to arrange elements in the periodic table. Joe Rando: I worked there in the early to mid-1980s and there were still older women analyzing photographs from bubble chambers. I’m not sure is they were recently produced or from years back being given a fresh look.Michel Talbot: Joe Rando It could be recently produced. The Big European Bubble Chamber (BEBC) for example was operational from 1977 to 1984. Even after 1984 it would have taken many years to plow through the huge backlog of 6.3 million 3D bubble chamber photographs of the 22 experiments at CERN. I'm not sure when the Brookhaven 80-inch chamber was decommissioned though. Paul Napier: Thanks for posting this. I worked in that facility after the 80" Bubble Chamber was shut down, salvaging parts. Later worked on the 7' [2.1m] Bubble Chamber, 1975-1978. [That is just 4" larger than the 80" chamber. I wonder what else was different because size change doesn't seem to be significant.] Phillip Rulon: I worked at the AGS in the 1980s. I’ll never forget the beam horn that sounded each time the ring emptied out into the experimental areas. It was a haunting sound, almost like a howl of a wild animal. Alan Nebola: I spent a couple years working at the Fermilab 15’ [4.6m] Bubble Chamber. That was in 1979-1981. I started out at Internal Target group working for Peter McIntyre working on a antiproton storage ring and then moved to the bubble chamber |
Michel commented on his post The AGS's Cockroft-Walton generator, used to provide the initial acceleration to protons prior to injection into the 50 MeV LINAC and then on to the AGS booster. |
Michel commented on his post Bubble chamber picture of the first observed omega-minus particle --discovered in 1964 by a team of physicists from Brookhaven, the University of Rochester and Syracuse University, led by Nicholas Samios of Brookhaven, using the 80-inch bubble chamber at the AGS. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omega_baryon |
Martin Walsh commented on Michel's post I love the little doll hanging from the clock! Jim Williams: It looks like one of the little troll dolls that were popular in the 60s. My sister and I had a few. |
AmericanHistory, 1 of 7 photos "Object EM.N-10118 is the chamber proper of the Brookhaven 80" hydrogen bubble chamber." [This page has a history about detection chambers.] The Brookhaven 30bev AGS was started in 1960. "The bubble chamber is made of a non-magnetic stainless steel. A piston in the cylinder above expanded and compressed the liquid hydrogen once per second; it was cycled, and photographed, more than ten million times in the decade it was in operation....The flat glass window, 6 inches thick and weighing 1500 pounds, was, when made, the largest piece of optical quality glass....Fifty physicists, engineers, and technicians kept the chamber operating 24 hours a day....These six- and seven-foot bubble chambers of the early 1960s, containing some 200 gallons of liquid hydrogen, were succeeded towards the end of the decade by a generation of 3,000 to 10,000-gallon, barrel-shaped chambers. Of these there were only four; one each at Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago, at Brookhaven National Laboratory, at CERN in Switzerland, and at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, also near Chicago. Their leading role in elementary particle physics later passed to complex electronic detectors." |
HyperPhysics "The discovery of the omega baryon was a great triumph for the quark model of baryons because it was searched for and found only after its existence, mass, and decay modes were predicted by the quark model. It was discovered at Brookhaven in 1964. " |
Since I can't remember the Standard Model, a found a copy for reference.
abc, Wikimedia Commons: Miss J |
You have explained a complex machine/process so it is understandable to the "Common Man"(?). When I first saw it I thought "no way", then I read the second paragraph. Then the rest of the article. I understand physics? Of course not, but I sort of understand how an experiment works mechanically. Thank you.
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