Bubble
chamber
A
bubble chamber is a vessel filled with a
superheated
transparent
liquid used to detect ionized
particles moving through it. The ionized particle deposits sufficient energy in
the liquid that it begins to boil along its path, forming a string of bubbles.
Bubble chambers are similar to cloud chambers in application and basic principle.
It was invented by
Donald
A. Glaser, for which he was awarded the 1960
Nobel
Prize in Physics.