Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
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The Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN) (National Institute for Nuclear Physics) is the coordinating institution for nuclear, particle and astroparticle physics in Italy. It was founded on the 8th of August 1951, to further the nuclear physics research tradition initiated by Enrico Fermi in Rome, in the 1930s. The INFN collaborates with CERN, Fermilab and various other laboratories in the world. In recent years it has provided important contributions to Grid computing.
During the latter half of the 1950’s, the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare designed and constructed the first Italian accelerator—the electron synchrotron developed in Frascati. In the early sixties, it also constructed in Frascati the first ever electron-positron collider (ADA - Anello Di Accumulazione), under the scientific leadership of Bruno Touschek[1]. During the same period, the INFN began to participate in research into the construction and use of ever-more powerful accelerators being conducted at CERN.
The INFN has Sezioni (Sections) in most major Italian Universities, and 4 National Laboratories. It has personnel of its own, but it is mostly the main funding agency for high-energy physics in Italy. University personnel can be affiliated with INFN and receive from it research grants.
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[edit] Laboratories
- Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso
- Laboratorio Nazionale di Legnaro
- Laboratorio Nazionale di Frascati
- Laboratorio Nazionale di Catania
[edit] See also
- Touschek effect - an effect first observed in ADA and explained by Touschek (after whom it is now named), whereby the beam lifetime of storage rings is reduced due to loss of the colliding particles from scattering.
- Møller scattering
- FLUKA
- The INFN Grid Project: INFN involvement in grid computing.