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Photon interactions in the BeV‐energy range

SEP 01, 1963
During the period January 26–30, 1963, some 300 physicists gathered at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for an international conference on the physics of photons at energies greater than 1 BeV. The conference was sponsored jointly by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics, the United States Atomic Energy Commission, the National Science Foundation, and the Office of Naval Research. The author of this informal summary of the discussions is professor of physics at MIT.
Bernard T. Feld

The idea of holding a conference early in 1963 on high‐energy photon interactions was a natural one for at least two reasons: first, the Cambridge Electron Accelerator, producing electron and photon beams of energies up to about 6 BeV, came into operation in 1962, so that the time was ripe for detailed consideration of what could be accomplished with such facilities; second, it had been apparent for some time that the traditional “Rochester Conferences” on high‐energy physics could not fully satisfy the needs of all the workers in the field for exchange of information and ideas on all of its aspects. Thus, the IUPAP Commission on High‐Energy Physics had decided that it would be appropriate to hold the Rochester‐type conferences only every second year, and to sponsor regional conferences on specialized topics in the “off‐years”.

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Bernard T. Feld, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Volume 16, Number 9

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