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45 - Scientific impact of the first decade of the Rochester conferences (1950–1960)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 May 2010

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Summary

Introduction

The first Rochester conference on high-energy nuclear physics was held 16 December 1950, twenty months after the last of the three Shelter Island conferences on the foundations of quantum mechanics, organized by Robert Oppenheimer (1947–9). Five high-energy accelerators (“high energy” was defined as > 100 MeV thirty-five years ago!) had been completed since the end of World War II and were producing research results: two at Berkeley (340–MeV synchrocyclotron and 300-MeV electron-synchrotron), the Rochester 240-MeV and Harvard 150-MeV synchrocyclotrons, and the Cornell 300-MeV electron-synchrotron. Many more accelerators with even higher energies were under construction. Cosmic-ray experimentalists throughout the world were making extremely important contributions to the field.

It seemed clear to me that the Shelter Island conferences – which had been limited to a small number of theorists, with a couple of “token” experimentalists – should be replaced by a new series of conferences that would give equal weight to the participation of accelerator experimentalists, cosmicray experimentalists, and theorists. As the newly installed chairman of the Rochester Physics Department – with one of the few meson-producing machines in operation and a very active cosmic-ray group – I decided to organize an invitational conference that would thoroughly discuss the latest developments in high-energy physics.

The first two Rochester conferences were small (fifty to seventy-five participants), were of short duration (two days), were supported by local industry, and still were not truly international (Europe and Japan were recovering from the war). Their success and the increasing worldwide interest in the field led to the raising of sights in all respects.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pions to Quarks
Particle Physics in the 1950s
, pp. 645 - 667
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1989

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