The History of Accelerators - Ted Wilson (CERN)
Taken from cds.cern.ch/record/320122?ln=en
For educational purposes
Author Wilson, Edmund J N
Corporate author CERN. Geneva
Imprint 1998. - Transparencies ; streaming video, 00:42:44:00.
Series CERN Academic Training Lecture
(Lectures for Postgraduate Students)
Note CERN, Geneva, 13 Jan 1998
Presented at Academic Training Lectures, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 1 Sep 1997 - 30 Jun 1998
Subject category Accelerators and Storage Rings
Copyright/License © 1998 CERN
Пікірлер: 10
Wow! I'm watching this video, trying to pay attention because I'm so excited about watching all of your other videos next! Hahaa How have I not found you sooner?! My new favorite channel. 😄*SUBSCRIBED*😄
Thank you for this informative upload.
Sir can you send me the reference please
Was this the same guy acting ( in the movie ’ XXX ‘ staring Vin D ) as one of the lab rats that gets gassed towards the end of the movie?
_"Lawrence irradiated his mother-in law."_ That's harsh.
Please tell me you’re going to talk about radar development during World War II-- oh jolly good :D you did Most people don’t realise that Roentgen and Tesla were friends and that Tesla actually showed Roentgen how to do it and the principles behind it and shared everything openly with him and encouraged him to take it up because Tesla was busy with other matters they exchange letters and actually there is a history there- In fact his version was slightly inferior to NT’s and Tesla tried to correct him but he already had something that worked so didn’t feel like abandoning it in favour of someone else’s technique. Shame really because Teslas‘s x-ray was much safer ..and to think nano-accelerators are now used widely for all kinds of wonderful things-
Dominic petrovich
Sophia Robotic's Robot's Learning Auto CAD Design 360-D Man & Women Debugging errors Proton particle accelerator liquid hydrogen accumulation Sun or gamma rays periodic tables
Koklolo
Sophia Robotic's Robot's Learning Auto CAD Design 360-D Man & Women Debugging errors Proton particle accelerator liquid hydrogen accumulation Sun or gamma rays periodic tables