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Computer
Heritage collection CERN-OBJ-CERN-OBJ-IT-004 · Stuk
Part of Heritage Collection Test

Special terminals for the first computer ever used by CERN library.

Breskin wire chamber
Heritage collection CERN-OBJ-CERN-OBJ-DE-035 · Stuk · 1970
Part of Heritage Collection Test

Prototype made by Breskin.Has never been used. Breskin was a ph.d student working under Charpak supervision. The dimensions include the support.

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PS wire chamber
Heritage collection CERN-OBJ-CERN-OBJ-DE-038 · Stuk · 1970
Part of Heritage Collection Test

Three pieces. Wire chambers used for the beams at CERN's Proton Synchrotron accelerator in the 1970s. Multi-wire detectors contain layers of positively and negatively charged wires enclosed in a chamber Multi-wire detectors contain layers of positively and negatively charged wires enclosed in a chamber full of gas. A charged particle passing through the chamber knocks negatively charged electrons out of atoms in the gas, leaving behind positive ions. The electrons are pulled towards the positively charged wires. They collide with other atoms on the way, producing an avalanche of electrons and ions. The movement of these electrons and ions induces an electric pulse in the wires which is collected by fast electronics. The size of the pulse is proportional to the energy loss of the original particle.

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Wire chamber
Heritage collection CERN-OBJ-CERN-OBJ-DE-050 · Stuk
Part of Heritage Collection Test

Multi-wire detectors contain layers of positively and negatively charged wires enclosed in a chamber full of gas. A charged particle passing through the chamber knocks negatively charged electrons out of atoms in the gas, leaving behind positive ions. The electrons are pulled towards the positively charged wires. They collide with other atoms on the way, producing an avalanche of electrons and ions. The movement of these electrons and ions induces an electric pulse in the wires which is collected by fast electronics. The size of the pulse is proportional to the energy loss of the original particle.

OPAL Jet Chamber Prototype
Heritage collection CERN-OBJ-CERN-OBJ-DE-065 · Stuk · 1984-86
Part of Heritage Collection Test

OPAL was one of the four experiments installed at the LEP particle accelerator from 1989 - 2000. OPAL's central tracking system consists of (in order of increasing radius) a silicon microvertex detector, a vertex detector, a jet chamber, and z-chambers. All the tracking detectors work by observing the ionization of atoms by charged particles passing by: when the atoms are ionized, electrons are knocked out of their atomic orbitals, and are then able to move freely in the detector. These ionization electrons are detected in the dirfferent parts of the tracking system. This piece is a prototype of the jet chambers

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Cisco ASM Router
Heritage collection CERN-OBJ-CERN-OBJ-IT-007 · Stuk · 2001
Part of Heritage Collection Test

One of the two "ASM/2-32EM" boxes installed in 1988, from "Cisco Systems Inc." - then an unknown 20-employee company in Menlo Park, California (USA). This is one of the first two Cisco boxes to appear in Switzerland, and possibly Europe. The 220v power supply was a special modification made for use at CERN. They supported IP address filtering, which seemed just what CERN needed to help protect the new Cray XMP-48 super computer from network hackers. The two ASM boxes were both routers and terminal servers. They protected a secure private Ethernet segment used by the Cray project, as well as providing secure terminal connections to that segment, including CERN's first dialback terminal service, which allowed Cray and CERN system analysts to work on the machine from home, using another Cisco feature called TACACS. (Kindly offered by B. Segal who discovered this company while at a Usenix Conference in Phoenix, Arizona in June 1987.)