Interactions News Wire
#79-05
27 September 2005
http://www.interactions.org*******************************************************************
Source:
CERN
Content: Press Release
Date Issued: 27 September
2005
*******************************************************************
PR11.05
27.09.2005
CERN receives prestigious Milestone recognition from
IEEEGeneva, 27 September 2005. At a ceremony last night at CERN*, Mr
W. Cleon Anderson, President of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers (IEEE**) formally dedicated a Milestone plaque in recognition of
the invention of electronic particle detectors at CERN. The plaque was unveiled
by Mr Anderson and Georges Charpak, the Nobel-prize winning inventor of wire
chamber technology at CERN in 1968.
With the attribution of this IEEE
Milestone, CERN finds itself in good company. There are currently over 60
Milestones around the world, awarded to such momentous achievements as the
landing of the first transatlantic cable, code breaking Bletchley Park during
World War II, and the development of the Japanese Bullet train, the Tokaido
Shinkansen.
“It has been my pleasure to have participated in the
dedication of seven of these Milestones,” said Mr Anderson at the event, adding
that all have brought important advances to humanity. “What is being done here
at CERN,” he concluded, “is of benefit to the world.”
Particle physics
research was revolutionised in 1968 when Georges Charpak published a paper
describing the multi-wire proportional chamber, a forerunner to many of the
particle detectors in use at CERN today. This invention paved the way for new
discoveries in particle physics, as underlined by Swiss Secretary of State for
Education and Research Charles Kleiber. “I am delighted that the IEEE has
decided to award a key Milestone to CERN for the invention of the multi-wire
proportional particle detector by Professor Charpak and his collaborators in
1968,” he said “These developments have led to crucial progress in our
understanding of the constituents of nature.”
Charpak’s invention also
made it possible to increase the rate of data collection by a factor of a
thousand. The significance of this was underlined by Walter LeCroy, founder of
the company that bears his name, who said that Charpak’s invention had
“transformed the world of the electronics developer.” “The advent of electronic
particle detectors,” he said, “brought the need to store, transmit and analyse
data faster than ever before.” Many of the developers working for LeCroy are
former particle physicists.
In 1992, Charpak, who had been working at
CERN since 1959, received the Nobel Prize in physics for his invention. He has
also actively contributed to the use of this new type of detector in various
applications in medicine and biology. The value of fundamental research
institutes such as CERN in fostering innovation of this kind was a recurring
theme of the ceremony. “CERN's reputation is based on fundamental research,”
said the Laboratory’s Director General, Robert Aymar, “but the Organization is
also an important source of new technologies. In our work we need instruments
based more and more on electronics, so that a tight collaboration worldwide in
this field is beneficial to science. In turn the developments in our science
feed back into the equipment in industry and in the end they appear in your
home.” The point was underlined by Charpak himself, who stressed the importance
of intellectual freedom, saying of his time at the Laboratory, “CERN was a
fantastic place because of the freedom I had, which permitted me to do a lot of
things that were unexpected.”
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For more information please contact
the CERN Press Office
tel. +41 22 767 4101 or +41 22 767 4101
2141
press.office@cern.chsee online
http://www.cern.ch/Press/for photos and
press releases
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* CERN, the European
Organization for Nuclear Research, is the world’s leading laboratory for
particle physics. It has its headquarters in Geneva. At present, its Member
States are Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal,
Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. India, Israel,
Japan, the Russian Federation, the United States of America, Turkey, the
European Commission and UNESCO have Observer status.
** The
IEEE is the world’s largest professional association dedicated to the
advancement of technology. Through its 365,000 members in 150 countries,
the society is a leading authority on a wide variety of areas ranging from
aerospace systems, computers and telecommunications to biomedical engineering,
electric power and consumer electronics. The IEEE publishes 30 percent of the
world's literature in the electrical and electronics engineering and computer
science fields, and has developed more than 900 active industry standards. The
organization also sponsors or cosponsors more than 300 international technical
conferences each year. Additional information is available at
www.ieee.org.
The IEEE Milestones were
established in 1983 to honour the most significant achievements in the history
of electrical and electronics
engineering.
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