Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2011
My interest in neutron-induced nucleation began with a simple and elegant demonstration in one of David Turnbull's classes in which a drop of water was superheated to about 250°C as it rose in a column of heated oil. As David Glaser, the inventor of the bubble chamber, so ably demonstrated, such superheated liquids are radiation sensitive. Our test system is a simple one. Halocarbon and hydrQcarbon drops are introduced into an aqueous holding gel under pressure at room temperature. As the pressure is released, the drops become superheated. Neutrons of sufficient energy will trigger vaporization of these moderately superheated drop detectors (SSDs), but gammas and x-rays will not unless the homogeneous nucleation limit is approached. We have performed measurements on the neutron energy threshold to produce nucleation in a number of different superheated materials at different temperatures. We have also developed a theory which indicates that of the energy deposited in a critical radius, only about 5% is effective in producing bubble formation. Both theory and experiment are discussed.