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Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science

Simon van der Meer was a brilliant scientist and a true giant of accelerator science. His seminal contributions to accelerator science have been essential to this day in our quest for satisfying the demands of modern particle physics. Whether we talk of long base-line neutrino physics or antiproton-...

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Autor principal: Chohan, Vinod C
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S1793626811000550
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1446646
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author Chohan, Vinod C
author_facet Chohan, Vinod C
author_sort Chohan, Vinod C
collection CERN
description Simon van der Meer was a brilliant scientist and a true giant of accelerator science. His seminal contributions to accelerator science have been essential to this day in our quest for satisfying the demands of modern particle physics. Whether we talk of long base-line neutrino physics or antiproton-proton physics at Fermilab or proton-proton physics at LHC, his techniques and inventions have been a vital part of the modern day successes. Simon van der Meer and Carlo Rubbia were the first CERN scientists to become Nobel laureates in Physics, in 1984. Van der Meer's lesser-known contributions spanned a whole range of subjects in accelerator science, from magnet design to power supply design, beam measurements, slow beam extraction, sophisticated programs and controls.
id cern-1446646
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 2011
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spelling cern-14466462019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1142/S1793626811000550http://cds.cern.ch/record/1446646Chohan, Vinod CSimon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator scienceAccelerators and Storage RingsSimon van der Meer was a brilliant scientist and a true giant of accelerator science. His seminal contributions to accelerator science have been essential to this day in our quest for satisfying the demands of modern particle physics. Whether we talk of long base-line neutrino physics or antiproton-proton physics at Fermilab or proton-proton physics at LHC, his techniques and inventions have been a vital part of the modern day successes. Simon van der Meer and Carlo Rubbia were the first CERN scientists to become Nobel laureates in Physics, in 1984. Van der Meer's lesser-known contributions spanned a whole range of subjects in accelerator science, from magnet design to power supply design, beam measurements, slow beam extraction, sophisticated programs and controls.oai:cds.cern.ch:14466462011
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Chohan, Vinod C
Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science
title Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science
title_full Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science
title_fullStr Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science
title_full_unstemmed Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science
title_short Simon van der Meer (1925-2011): A modest genius of accelerator science
title_sort simon van der meer (1925-2011): a modest genius of accelerator science
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S1793626811000550
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1446646
work_keys_str_mv AT chohanvinodc simonvandermeer19252011amodestgeniusofacceleratorscience