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Cloud chamber
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Cloud chamber

The cloud chamber, also known as the Wilson chamber, is used for detecting particles of ionizing radiation.

Invention

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (1869-1959), a Scottish physicist, is credited with inventing the cloud chamber in 1900. In Wilson's original cloud chamber the air inside the sealed device was saturated with water vapor, then a diaphragm is used to expand the air inside the chamber. This cools the air and water vapor starts to condense. When an ionizing particle passes through the chamber the water vapor condenses on the resulting Ions, the trail of the particle is visible in the vapor cloud. Wilson, along with Arthur Compton, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1927 for his work on the cloud chamber.

Other chambers

A refinement of the design is the bubble chamber.

External references

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