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Description archivistique
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DELPHI Barrel Muon Chamber Module
CERN-OBJ-DE-067 · Pièce · 1989
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

The module was used as part of the muon identification system on the barrel of the DELPHI detector at LEP, and was in active use from 1989 to 2000. The module consists of 7 individual muons chambers arranged in 2 layers. Chambers in the upper layer are staggered by half a chamber width with respect to the lower layer. Each individual chamber is a drift chamber consisting of an anode wire, 47 microns in diameter, and a wrapped copper delay line. Each chamber provided 3 signal for each muon passing through the chamber, from which a 3D space-point could be reconstructed.

Sans titre
Antiproton Target
CERN-OBJ-AC-039 · Pièce · 1980
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

<!--HTML-->Antiproton target used for the AA (antiproton accumulator). The first type of antiproton production target used from 1980 to 1982 comprised a rod of copper 3mm diameter and 120mm long embedded in a graphite cylinder that was itself pressed into a finned aluminium container. This assembly was air-cooled and it was used in conjunction with the Van der Meer magnetic horn. In 1983 Fermilab provided us with lithium lenses to replace the horn with a view to increasing the antiproton yield by about 30%. These lenses needed a much shorter target made of heavy metal - iridium was chosen for this purpose. The 50 mm iridium rod was housed in an extension to the original finned target container so that it could be brought very close to the entrance to the lithium lens. Picture 1 shows this target assembly and Picture 2 shows it mounted together with the lithium lens. These target containers had a short lifetime due to a combination of beam heating and radiation damage. This led to the design of the water-cooled target in a titanium alloy body <A href="http://weblib.cern.ch/format/showfull?uid=519512&base=OBJOBJ&sysnb=0000166"> (see object AC-020).</A>

Silicon detector
CERN-OBJ-DE-072 · Pièce
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

Used in LEP experiment. It is a element of the first OPAL silicon strip vertex detector.

Focusing horn
CERN-OBJ-AC-044 · Pièce · 1980
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

This was the first magnetic horn developed by Simon Van der Meer to collect antiprotons in the AD complex. It was used for the AA (antiproton accumulator). Making an antiproton beam took a lot of time and effort. Firstly, protons were accelerated to an energy of 26 GeV/c (protons at 26GeV/c, antiprotons at 3.6GeV/c) in the PS and ejected onto a metal target. From the spray of emerging particles, a magnetic horn picked out 3.6 GeV antiprotons for injection into the AA through a wide-aperture focusing quadrupole magnet. For a million protons hitting the target, just one antiproton was captured, 'cooled' and accumulated. It took 3 days to make a beam of 3 x 10^11 -, three hundred thousand million - antiprotons. The development of this technology was a key step to the functioning of CERN's Super Proton Synchrotron as a proton - antiproton collider.

140Mb 9-track tape
CERN-OBJ-IT-008 · Pièce · 1965
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

With arrival of CDC 6600 at CERN in January 1965, there came the first half-inch wide 7-tracks tape units with magnetic tapes at recording densities of 200, 556 and 800 bpi (bytes per inch).

10 MB disk platter from CDC 7638
CERN-OBJ-IT-009 · Pièce · 1974
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

This magnetic disk was one of three which interfaced with various Control Data machines. This single platter came from a Control Data 7638 Disk Storage Subsystem and could contain up to 10MB - about the size of a few MP4's on your iPod.

IBM 3851 Mass Storage Cartridges
CERN-OBJ-IT-010 · Pièce · 1978
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

These cartridges represent the first step in technologies to automate the reading, writing and retrieval of data. Previous to this, all data had to be retrieved, loaded and dismounted by hand.

StorageTek T10000 Tape Cartridge
CERN-OBJ-IT-011 · Pièce · 1985
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

Oracle StorageTek T10000T2 cartridge has total capacity of 5 TB. It is actually manufactured by Fuji Film, uses Barium Ferrite (BaFe) particles technology data store, but is also equipped with RFID chip. There is over 1 km of tape inside of the cartridge with 3584 data tracks and it supports over 25000 load/unload cycles. The archival life is estimated to be around 30 years and uncorrected bit error rate is 10-19. CERN however usually migrates data to newer technologies roughly every 5 years in order to keep the footprint under control.

2TB hard disk drive
CERN-OBJ-IT-013 · Pièce
Fait partie de Heritage Collection

This particular object was used up until 2012 in the Data Centre. It slots into one of the Disk Server trays. Hard disks were invented in the 1950s. They started as large disks up to 20 inches in diameter holding just a few megabytes (link is external). They were originally called "fixed disks" or "Winchesters" (a code name used for a popular IBM product). They later became known as "hard disks" to distinguish them from "floppy disks (link is external)." Hard disks have a hard platter that holds the magnetic medium, as opposed to the flexible plastic film found in tapes and floppies.