For 70 years, our faculty has been educating experts not only for the nuclear industry. Since its beginnings, it has broadened its field of activity to other areas and has made a significant contribution to the development of technical and natural sciences both in the Czech Republic and worldwide.
To mark this occasion, a special meeting of the Scientific Council and the Collegium will be held in the Bethlehem Chapel, followed by a programme at Břehová Street and, in the evening, A Night at Jaderka. All staff and students are warmly invited.
| 15:00 | Programme at Břehová 7, Prague 1 |
| 15:30 | History of the faculty – lecture in room B-103, Břehová 7, Prague 1 |
| 16:00 | Open Laboratories, Břehová 7, Prague 1 |
| 16:00 | Spin Physics at CERN – lecture in room B-103, Břehová 7, Prague 1 |
| 18:00 | Opening of the Night at Jaderka, Břehová 7, Prague 1 |
If you wish to take part in the Scientific Council meeting, please confirm your attendance here until November 10.
As part of the accompanying programme at Břehová, several laboratories will be open to visitors:
- 16:00–18:00 – TOKAMAK GOLEM (ground floor, entrance via the rear staircase), Ing. Vojtěch Svoboda, CSc.
- 16:00–18:00 – PLASMALAB@CTU (1st floor), RNDr. Jana Brotánková, Ph.D.
- 16:00–18:00 – Laboratory of Integral Dosimetry (room 207), Ing. Kateřina Pilařová, Ph.D.
Guided tours will also be available:
Center of Applied Physics and Advanced Detection Systems; ground floor, room B05 (Ing. Peter Švihra, Ph.D. a Ing. Radek Novotný, Ph.D.)
From Silicone to Radiation Detection
- 16:00–16:20
- 16:30–16:50
- 17:00–17:20
- 17:30–17:50
Laboratories of the Department of Dosimetry and Application of Ionizing Radiation; ground floor, room B15
- Gamma Spectrometry (Ing. Pavel Novotný, Ph.D.)
- 16:00-16:25
- 17:00-17:25
- Characterization of Scintillation Materials (doc. Ing. Petr Průša, Ph.D.)
- 16:30-16:55
- 17:30-17:55
Department of Physics; room B-103 (Michael Pešek, CERN)
Spin Physics at CERN
- 16:00
Abstract: Spin, the intrinsic property of particles, has been extensively studied since the famous Stern-Gerlach experiment more than 100 years ago. Up to this date several spin related mysteries remain. One of them is the origin of nucleon spin. In this talk I will introduce how we describe the nucleon in terms of its constituents and describe related experimental techniques that allowed to gain considerable insight in the nucleon spin. In this context the COMPASS experiment at CERN will be described along with its main results.