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The « Institut de Physique Nucléaire » in Orsay distinguished as an EPS Historic Site

Posted By Administration, Tuesday 5 December 2023

Author: Silvia Nicolai


The « Institut de Physique Nucléaire » (IPN) in Orsay, France, was recently added to the list of the Historic Sites of the European Physical Society. The laboratory, which recently became part of the Laboratoire Irène Joliot Curie (IJCLab), received this recognition with the following motivation: « Initiated in 1956 by Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie as an extension outside Paris of the renowned « Radium Institute » founded by Marie Curie, where in 1934 they had discovered artificial radioactivity, and of the « Nuclear Chemistry Laboratory » founded by Frédéric Joliot, the IPN hosted the first French big accelerator (a synchrocyclotron) which started operating in 1958. The creation of the IPN motivated the development of the Orsay scientific pole. Since then the IPN, which has now become part of the IJCLab laboratory, played and plays a pivotal role in the study of nuclear and hadronic physics, and beyond. »

The inclusion of IPN Orsay to the list of Historic Sites of EPS was celebrated on October 13 2023 in the Joliot-Curie amphitheater of IJCLab, with a half-day event comprising a ceremony and a mini-conference. The director of IJCLab, Achille Stocchi, opened the ceremony with a welcome speech, followed by a few words by Michel Guidal, deputy vice-president for research of the Paris-Saclay University and former director of IPN, and by Marcella Grasso, deputy scientific director of IN2P3 and former director of the Research Division at IPN. Then Luc Bergé, president of EPS, presented the role and activities of EPS, and, in particular, described the Historic Sites program. Finally, a commemorative plaque dedicated to Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie, showcasing the motivation for the recognition and the EPS logo, was unveiled by Luc Bergé along with Hélène Joliot-Langevin, daughter of Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie, and Alison Bruce, Chair of the Nuclear Physics Division Board of EPS. Other members of the NPD Board and the former directors of IPN also took part in the unveiling.

The mini-conference focused on the history of IPN, from its beginnings to nowadays. Hélène Joliot-Langevin, emeritus research director at CNRS and former director of the Physics Division at IPN Orsay, opened the conference presenting the origins of IPN in the historical context of the end of World-War II. She outlined, in particular, the efforts her parents made to reinstate France at the forefront of nuclear-physics research in Europe, and their political investment for a pacific use of nuclear power. Then Joel Pouthas, former director of the “Detectors and R&D” Division at IPN and historian of physics, gave an in-depth lecture on the history of IPN from its beginnings to recent years, a history marked by the construction and operation of various accelerators, made possible by several notable scientists supported by an outstanding staff of engineers and technicians. The former director of IPN, Sydney Galès, presented an overview of the scientific highlights of IPN throughout its more than 60 years of history, which spanned from low-energy nuclear physics, to hadron and high-energy physics, theory, radiochemistry, accelerators technology, and medical and societal applications of nuclear physics. The mini-conference was closed by a presentation of Silvia Leoni, professor of the Università di Milano and INFN scientist, which focused on the role of IPN in European low-energy nuclear physics, with a particular focus on the main achievements of the last ~15 years as well as on ongoing and future projects and collaborations.

All the presentations, photos, and a video-recording of the event can be found on the indico page: https://indico.ijclab.in2p3.fr/event/9821/

Luc Bergé, Hélène Joliot-Langevin, and Alison Bruce unveil the commemorative plaque - image credit: Silvia Nicolai

The presidents of EPS and SFP (French Physical Society), the speakers, the deputy director of IJCLab, the former directors of IPN, and the members of the NPD-EPS Board pose with the commemorative plaque at the end of the half-day event.

Tags:  awards  distinction  EPS Historic Sites  France  Frédéric Joliot-Curie  Institut de Physique Nucléaire  IPN  Irène Joliot-Curie  Orsay 

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The Ampère Museum declared as EPS Historic Site

Posted By Administration, Tuesday 16 November 2021

The Ampère house and museum in Poleymieux near Lyon, France. Photo: Christian Barberon/Wikimedia Commons

 

Author: Alfonso San Miguel


Wednesday, October 6 2021, the Ampère Museum was inaugurated as an EPS Historic Site. This is the fifth site in France and it is dedicated to André-Marie Ampère.

The Ampère family home, where André-Marie spent his childhood and studied brilliantly with his father, had an exceptional destiny. The state of Poleymieux-au-Mont-d'Or (Rhône) where it is located, about fifteen kilometers from Lyon, was sequestered for the benefit of the Nation in 1793, when the French Revolution condemned the future scientist's father to death. Restored to the family two years later, it fell to Ampère in 1812, after the death of his mother. He relinquished it ten years later when he settled permanently in Paris.

André-Marie Ampère spent a very large part of his childhood and youth in this house, soon after his birth in 1775 until he was 29 years old. Without attending school, he read Diderot’s Encyclopedia and learned to scrutinize Nature and to understand the mathematics, physics and chemistry of his time. It was during this period that emerged his first ideas about the relationship between electricity and magnetism. Few years later, in 1820 he established the first mathematical relationships between these two physical phenomena. By giving the name of Ampère to the international unit of electrical current, the whole world saluted his fundamental discoveries, which gave rise to electrodynamics.

It took a century for the Poleymieux estate to regain the memory of its prestigious former owner. It was on the advice of Paul Janet, a member of the French Academy of Sciences, that two wealthy American industrialists, Hernand and Sosthène Behn, bought the estate in 1928. They donated the estate to the French Society of Electricians (SEE), which entrusted it to the Society of the Friends of André-Marie Ampère (SAAMA), an association created to manage and develop a Museum of Electricity and to perpetuate the memory of the illustrious Lyon native.  The Museum of Electricity was inaugurated on 1st July 1931.

The EPS Historic Site ceremony, which was part of the "Ampère 200 ans" (Ampère 200 years) programme of commemorations for the bicentenary of André-Marie Ampère's discoveries in electrodynamics, was sponsored by Serge Haroche, 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics. In the morning, Serge Haroche gave a lecture at the University of Sciences of Lyon  to more than 400 participants on the history of light. He highlighted the importance of André-Marie Ampère's discoveries in the unification of electricity, magnetism and optics. At the end of the day, the ceremony continued at the Ampère Museum where the commemorative plaque was unveiled by Serge Haroche and Luc Bergé in front of a hundred people, representatives of the academic world of Lyon, the electricity industry and learned societies. The ceremony was conducted together by François Gerin, president of the SEE, who also read a message from Gérard Mourou, 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics and sponsor of “Ampère 200 ans”, and by the President of the Society of the Friends of André-Marie Ampère, Alfonso San Miguel, who nominated the site.

 

FLTR: Guy Wormser (SFP), François Gerin (SEE), Serge Haroche, Luc Bergé (EPS), Gabriel Fioni (representative of the French Ministry of Higher Education and Research),
Corinne Cardona (major of Poleymieux) and Alfonso San Miguel (SAAMA and SFP) - Photo: Alfonso San Miguel

Tags:  Ampère  award  electrodynamics  EPS Historic Site  France  Nobel Prize  Serge Haroche 

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