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Track Chamber Committee

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Revision as of 21:09, 14 January 2026 by Sreyes (talk | contribs)

In 1960 the Director-General John Adams proposed a number of measures to define a global policy for the exploitation of the new Proton Synchrotron. He decided to create three committees, one for each experimental technique used:

These three new committees were proposed to replace the Advisory Committee and Bubble Chamber Committee.

The TCC functions were to propose to the Nuclear Physics Research Committee track chamber experiments to be carried out at CERN, and also to form a link between the European track chamber groups and the CERN Laboratory.

The TCC came into operation in 1961, and met about once a month.  It comprised a Chairperson (a senior physicist working on track chamber experiments, not on the staff of CERN) and members (representatives of CERN and other European track chamber groups (including picture evaluation groups)) wanting to use CERN facilities.

After 1966 the TCC was commonly known as the Physics II Committee (PH-II-COM). It considered and selected the proposals for experiments using the bubble chambers at CERN :

In 1976 (end of the bubble chambers period) John Adams and Léon Van Hove rationalized the system, abolishing the committee system based on experimental technique, and basing it instead on the machine. EEC and TCC merged to become the Proton Synchrotron Committee (PSC).

1961 1965 1974 1976 1977
EEC EEC / PH-I-COM EEC PSC
TCC TCC / PH-II-COM TCC
PSC