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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physics 1958
Pavel A. Cherenkov, Il´ja M. Frank, Igor Y. Tamm
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor K. Siegbahn, member of the Swedish Academy of Sciences
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
The discovery of the phenomenon now known as the Cerenkov effect,
for which the Nobel Prize is today being awarded, is an
interesting example of how a relatively simple physical
observation, if followed through in the right way, can lead to
important findings and open up new paths to research. Here the
scientist must be endowed with that unique intuitive experimental
disposition which is the true incentive in scientific
progress.
Among the students at the Lebedev Institute in Moscow in the early thirties
was Pavel Cerenkov. The task assigned to him by his teacher,
Professor Vavilov, for his thesis work, was to study what happens
when the radiation from a radium source penetrates into and is
absorbed in different fluids. The same problem had no doubt
concerned many scientists before this young graduate student and,
to be sure, many had also observed the weak bluish glow that
emanated from the liquid as the radiation penetrated it. Special
mention should be made of the important observation of the
Frenchman Lucien Mallet. The bluish glow had - as it seemed on
good grounds - always been considered a manifestation of the
well-known fluorescence phenomenon. This phenomenon has for more
than half a century been used, for instance, by radiologists in
X-ray fluoroscopes, where the "invisible" X-radiation is allowed
to strike a fluorescent screen, which then lights up.
Cerenkov, however, was not convinced that the light phenomenon he
had observed was really of the fluorescence nature. Already his
first experiments indicated that his suspicions were correct. He
found, for instance, that the radiation was essentially
independent of the composition of the liquid. This was in
disagreement with the fluorescence explanation. By observing
radiation even in doubly distilled water, he eliminated the
possibility of minute impurities fluorescing in the
liquids.
Cerenkov made the new, unknown radiation the subject of a
systematic investigation. In his work he found that the radiation
was " polarized" along the direction of the incoming radium
radiation and that it was the fast secondary electrons, produced
by the latter, that were the primary cause of the visible
radiation. This was verified by irradiating the liquids with only
the electrons from a radium source.
The investigations that Cerenkov published in the Russian
periodicals between 1934 and 1937 essentially established the
general properties of the newly discovered radiation. However, a
mathematical description of the effect was still lacking. Here
two of Cerenkov's colleagues in Moscow enter into the picture.
How can a fast electron on passing through a liquid give rise to
radiation with the properties observed by Cerenkov? In the
beginning, the phenomenon seemed difficult to understand but in
the work of Frank and Tamm (1937) an explanation was given that
besides being both simple and clear, also satisfied the
requirements for mathematical stringency.
The phenomenon can be compared to the bow wave of a vessel that
moves through the water with a velocity exceeding that of the
waves. This is, incidentally, a simple experiment that anybody
can make. First one drops an object into a bowl of water and
observes the propagation velocity of the circular wave front.
Then one moves the object along the water surface very slowly to
begin with but gradually increasing the velocity. When the latter
exceeds the wave velocity previously observed, a bow wave is
formed that extends obliquely backwards in the well-known
way.
The wave velocity in the water surface is of course low and
therefore it is easy to produce the bow wave in this case. In
air, an analogous phenomenon occurs when a jet plane penetrates
the so-called sound barrier at about 1,000 km/h, i.e. when the
jet velocity exceeds the propagation velocity of the sound waves.
This is accompanied by a bang.
The condition that is required to form the corresponding Cerenkov
bow wave of ordinary light when a charged particle, e.g. an
electron, traverses a medium is, analogously, that the particle
moves with a velocity greater than that of light in the medium.
At first, one might think this is impossible, for according to
Einstein's famous theory of
relativity the velocity of light is the highest possible
velocity. This is in itself correct, but the velocity referred to
in Einstein's theory is the velocity of light in empty space or
vacuum. In a medium, e.g. a liquid or a transparent solid, the
velocity of light is lower than in vacuum and furthermore varies
with the wavelength. This fact is well-known from school
experiments on the refraction of light in a prism. In such a
medium, it is thus entirely possible for an ultra-fast electron,
emitted from a radioactive source, to move with a velocity
greater than that of light in the medium. In that case, a
Cerenkov bow wave is formed and the liquid glows with the bright
blue magic shine from the hectic race of the electrons with the
out-distanced light.
A beautiful sight is seen on looking down into a uranium reactor
containing water; a so-called swimming-pool reactor. The whole
core is aglow with the blue Cerenkov light and in this light one
can even photograph the inside of the reactor.
In the successful studies of new elementary particles undertaken
during the last few years, e.g. the discovery in 1955 of the
antiproton - the negative hydrogen nucleus - the Cerenkov effect
has played a decisive part. An instrument based on this effect
has been designed that is capable of registering the passage of
single particles. Only under the condition that the particle has
a sufficiently high velocity will it be registered by the
instrument which, at the same time, can measure the velocity. For
the velocity determination, which can be made with considerable
accuracy, one makes use of the fact that the angle of the bow
wave depends on the particle velocity. The faster the particle
moves, the smaller will be the angle between them. This is easily
understood from the example with the vessel in the water. This
new type of radiation detector has been named after Cerenkov and
is now among the most important instruments at the big atomic
laboratories, where elementary particles are accelerated to
extremely high velocities.
The discovery of Cerenkov, Frank, and Tamm, about twenty years
ago has thus, during the last few years, found an application of
decisive importance in the study of the basic structure and
nature of matter.
Professor Cerenkov, Professor Frank, Academician Tamm. The Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences has awarded to you the Nobel Prize for Physics for your discovery and explanation of the effect which now bears the name of one of you. This discovery not only throws light upon a hitherto-unknown physical phenomenon, but also provides a new and effective tool for the study of the atom. I congratulate you most heartily on behalf of the Academy, and ask you to accept the prize from the hands of His Majesty the King.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1958
MLA style: "Nobel Prize in Physics 1958 - Presentation Speech". Nobelprize.org. 19 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1958/press.html
