|
I
was born in 1925, in The Hague, the Netherlands, as the third child of
Pieter van der Meer and Jetske Groeneveld, both of Frisian origin. I had
three sisters.
My father was a schoolteacher
and my mother came from a teacher's family. Under these conditions it
is not astonishing that learning was highly prized; in fact, my parents
made sacrifices to be able to give their children a good education.
I visited the Gymnasium in The Hague and passed my final examination (in
the sciences section) in 1943. Because the Dutch universities had just
been closed at that time under the German occupation, I spent the next
two years attending the humanities section of the Gymnasium. Meanwhile,
my interest in physics and technology had been growing; I dabbled in electronics,
equipped the parental home with various gadgets and assisted my brilliant
and inspiring physics teacher (U.Ph. Lely) with the preparation of numerous
demonstrations.
From 1945 onwards, I studied "Technical Physics" at the University of
Technology, Delft, where I specialized in measurement and regulation technology
under C.J.D.M. Verhagen. The physics taught in this newly created subsection
of an old and established engineering school, although of excellent quality,
was of necessity somewhat restricted and I have often felt regrets at
not having had the intensive physics training that many of my colleagues
enjoyed. Nevertheless, if I have at times been able to make original contributions
in the accelerator field, I cannot help feeling that to a certain extent
my slightly amateur approach in physics, combined with much practical
experience, was an asset.
After obtaining my engineering degree in 1952, I worked in the Philips
Research Laboratory, Eindhoven, mainly on high-voltage equipment and electronics
for electron microscopes. In 1956 I moved to Geneva to join the recently
founded European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), where I have
been working ever since on many different projects, in an agreeable and
stimulating international atmosphere.
To start with, my work (under the leadership of J.B. Adams and C.A. Ramm)
was concerned mainly with technical design: poleface windings, multipole
correction lenses for the 28 GeV synchrotron and their power supplies.
My interest in matters more directly concerned with the handling of particles
was growing, in the meantime, stimulated by many contacts with people
understanding accelerators. After working for a year on a separated antiproton
beam (1960), I proposed a high-current, pulsed focusing device ("horn")
aimed at increasing the intensity of a beam of neutrinos, then at the
centre of interest at CERN and elsewhere. The design of this monster,
together with the associated neutrino flux calculations kept me busy until
1965, when I joined a small group, led by F.J.M. Farley, preparing the
second "g-2" experiment for measuring the anomalous magnetic moment of
the muon. I designed the small storage ring used and participated at all
stages of the experiment proper, including part of the data treatment.
This was an invaluable experience; not only did I learn the principles
of accelerator design, but I also got acquainted with the lifestyle and
way of thinking of experimental high-energy physicists.
From 1967 to 1976 I returned to more technical work when I was responsible
for the magnet power supplies, first of the Intersecting Storage Rings
(ISR) and then of the 400 GeV synchrotron (SPS). I kept up with accelerator
ideas, however, and worked (during my ISR period) on a method for the
luminosity calibration of storage rings and on stochastic cooling. The
latter was, of course, aimed at increasing the ISR luminosity, but practical
application seemed difficult at the time, mainly because the high beam
intensity in the ISR would have made the cooling very slow. After developing
a primitive theory (1968) I therefore did not pursue this subject. However,
the work was taken up by others and in 1974 the first experiments were
done in the ISR.
In 1976, Cline, McIntyre, Mills, and Rubbia proposed to use the SPS or
the Fermilab ring as a pp collider. Accumulation of the needed antiprotons
would clearly require cooling. At this time, my work on the SPS power
supplies had just come to an end; I joined a study group on the pp project
and an experimental team studying cooling in a small ring (ICE). The successful
experiments in this ring and the work by Sacherer on theory and by Thorndahl
on filter cooling showed that p accumulation by stochastic stacking was
feasible. The collider project was approved and I became joint project
leader with R. Billinge for the accumulator construction. Since then,
I have worked with the group that commissioned and improved the ring and
that is now preparing the construction of a second ring to increase the
p stacking rate by an order of magnitude. As a spin-off from this work,
I proposed the stochastic extraction method that is now used (in a much
improved form) in the Low-Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR).
In the meantime, in 1966, while skiing with friends in the Swiss mountains,
I met my wife-to-be Catharina M. Koopman and after a very brief interval
we decided to marry. This was certainly one of the best decisions I ever
made; my life has since been far more interesting and colourful. We have
two children: Esther (1968) and Mathijs (1970).
(added in 1991):
In 1990 I retired
from CERN.
Horzours Loeb Lecturer,
Harvard University, 1981.
Duddell Metal, Institute of Physics, 1982.
Honorary Degree, Geneva University, 1983.
Honorary Degree, Amsterdam University, 1984.
Foreign Honorary Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1984.
Correspondent, Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences, 1984.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990.
|