Simon van der Meer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Simon [[van der Meer]] (born November 24, 1925, The Hague) is a Dutch accelerator physicist who invented the concept of stochastic cooling in colliders, making possible the discovery of the W particle and the Z particle at the CERN 500 Gev proton-antiproton collider by the UA-1 experimental collaboration led by Carlo Rubbia. As a result van der Meer and Rubbia shared the 1984 Nobel Prize in Physics. A picture of the celebration of the award can be found at [1]

In 1952 van der Meer received a degree in physical engineering from the Higher Technical School in Delft, Netherlands. He worked for the Philips Company until 1956. This year he joined CERN as staff until his retirement in 1990.

Simon van der Meer together with Ernest Orlando Lawrence are the only two accelerator physicists awarded with the Nobel prize.

  1. ^ Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der Meer celebrating the Nobel prize


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