Sir John Adams


Sir John Adams (24 May 1920 - 3 March 1984) was the 'father' of the
giant particle accelerators which have made CERN the leader in the field
of high energy physics. He was an extraordinary accelerator designer,
engineer, scientist and administrator. He worked during World War II in
the Radar Laboratories of the Ministry of Aircraft Production.
Thereafter he worked at the Atomic Energy Research establishment at
Harwell on the design and construction of a 180 MeV synchro-cyclotron.
He came to CERN in September 1953 and was appointed director of the PS
division in 1954 at the age of 34, becoming the leader for the world's
biggest particle accelerator project. From 1961-66 Adams worked as
director of the Culham Fusion Laboratory. From 1966-71 he was member of
the Board of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority. In 1971 he
returned to CERN and served until 1975 as Director-General of what was
then called Laboratory II, responsible for the design and construction
of the SPS accelerator. From 1976-80 he was executive Director-General
of CERN and instrumental in getting approval for the LEP collider.
The
Royal Society
has published a biography of Sir John Bertram Adams. It is available as a PDF
file
here (33 pages; 7Mb) with the
kind permission of the Royal Society who owns the copyright and it is also available, for those with JSTOR access,
here (33 pages; image, PDF and ps files available [on the JSTOR website]).