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BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber

The vessel of the Big European Bubble Chamber, BEBC, was installed at the beginning of the 1970s. The large stainless-steel vessel, measuring 3.7 metres in diameter and 4 metres in height, was filled with 35 cubic metres of liquid (hydrogen, deuterium or a neon-hydrogen mixture), whose sensitivity w...

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Autor principal: CERN PhotoLab
Publicado: 1971
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/41546
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author CERN PhotoLab
author_facet CERN PhotoLab
author_sort CERN PhotoLab
collection CERN
description The vessel of the Big European Bubble Chamber, BEBC, was installed at the beginning of the 1970s. The large stainless-steel vessel, measuring 3.7 metres in diameter and 4 metres in height, was filled with 35 cubic metres of liquid (hydrogen, deuterium or a neon-hydrogen mixture), whose sensitivity was regulated by means of a huge piston weighing 2 tonnes. During each expansion, the trajectories of the charged particles were marked by a trail of bubbles, where liquid reached boiling point as they passed through it. The first images were recorded in 1973 when BEBC, equipped with the largest superconducting magnet in service at the time, first received beam from the PS. In 1977, the bubble chamber was exposed to neutrino and hadron beams at higher energies of up to 450 GeV after the SPS came into operation. By the end of its active life in 1984, BEBC had delivered a total of 6.3 million photographs to 22 experiments devoted to neutrino or hadron physics. Around 600 scientists from some fifty laboratories throughout the world had taken part in analysing the 3000 km of film it had produced.
id cern-41546
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 1971
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spelling cern-415462019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/41546CERN PhotoLabBEBC, the Big European Bubble ChamberExperiments and TracksThe vessel of the Big European Bubble Chamber, BEBC, was installed at the beginning of the 1970s. The large stainless-steel vessel, measuring 3.7 metres in diameter and 4 metres in height, was filled with 35 cubic metres of liquid (hydrogen, deuterium or a neon-hydrogen mixture), whose sensitivity was regulated by means of a huge piston weighing 2 tonnes. During each expansion, the trajectories of the charged particles were marked by a trail of bubbles, where liquid reached boiling point as they passed through it. The first images were recorded in 1973 when BEBC, equipped with the largest superconducting magnet in service at the time, first received beam from the PS. In 1977, the bubble chamber was exposed to neutrino and hadron beams at higher energies of up to 450 GeV after the SPS came into operation. By the end of its active life in 1984, BEBC had delivered a total of 6.3 million photographs to 22 experiments devoted to neutrino or hadron physics. Around 600 scientists from some fifty laboratories throughout the world had taken part in analysing the 3000 km of film it had produced.CERN-PHOTO-7112223CERN-EX-7112223oai:cds.cern.ch:415461971
spellingShingle Experiments and Tracks
CERN PhotoLab
BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber
title BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber
title_full BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber
title_fullStr BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber
title_full_unstemmed BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber
title_short BEBC, the Big European Bubble Chamber
title_sort bebc, the big european bubble chamber
topic Experiments and Tracks
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/41546
work_keys_str_mv AT cernphotolab bebcthebigeuropeanbubblechamber