Cockroft and Walton's Accelerator, 1932.
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Picture Number:10284226 Credit:Science Museum/Science & Society Picture Library
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Description:
In April 1932, at Cambridge, John Cockcroft (1897-1967) and Ernest Walton used this machine to accelerate protons to disintegrate lithium nuclei. In 1928 Gamow had explained, using quantum mechanics, how a particle escaped from a nucleus by tunnelling out through the barrier holding it in. Cockcroft realised that comparatively low-energy particles might be able to tunnel into a nucleus, causing it to disintegrate. They built this accelerator to prove it, and received the Nobel Prize in 1951.
Object Number: 1933-501 Date Made: 1932 Maker: Walton, E. T. S. (Ernest Thomas Sinton), 1903-1995 Maker: Cockroft, John, Sir, 1897-1967 Place of Production: World > Europe > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge In Collection of: Science Museum Subject(s) > Science & Technology > Physics: Atomic & Nuclear Physics
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