PARTICLE ACCELERATOR

apparatus used in nuclear physics to produce beams of energetic charged particles and to direct them against various targets. Such machines, popularly called atom smashers, are needed to observe objects as small as the atomic nucleus in studies of its structure and of the forces that hold it together. Accelerators are also needed to provide enough energy to create new particles. Besides pure research, accelerators have practical applications in medicine and industry, most notably in the production of radioisotopes. A majority of the world's particle accelerators are situated in the United States, either at major universities or national laboratories. In Europe the principal facility is the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN) near Geneva, Switzerland; in Russia important installations exist at Dubna and Serpukhov.

Design of Particle Accelerators

There are many types of accelerator designs, although all have certain features in common. Only charged particles (most commonly protons and electrons, and their antiparticles; less often deuterons, alpha particles, and heavy ions) can be artificially accelerated; therefore, the first stage of any accelerator is an ion source to produce the charged particles from a neutral gas. All accelerators use electric fields (steady, alternating, or induced) to speed up particles; most use magnetic fields to contain and focus the beam. Meson factories (the largest of which is at the Los Alamos, N.Mex., Scientific Laboratory), so called because of their copious pion production by high-current proton beams, operate at conventional energies but produce much more intense beams than previous accelerators; this makes it possible to repeat early experiments much more accurately. In linear accelerators the particle path is a straight line; in other machines, of which the cyclotron is the prototype, a magnetic field is used to bend the particles in a circular or spiral path.

Linear Accelerators

The early linear accelerators used high voltage to produce high-energy particles; a large static electric charge was built up, which produced an electric field along the length of an evacuated tube, and the particles acquired energy as they moved through the electric field. The Cockcroft-Walton accelerator produced high voltage by charging a bank of capacitors in parallel and then connecting them in series, thereby adding up their separate voltages. The Van de Graaff accelerator achieved high voltage by using a continuously recharged moving belt to deliver charge to a high-voltage terminal consisting of a hollow metal sphere. Today these two electrostatic machines are used in low-energy studies of nuclear structure and in the injection of particles into larger, more powerful machines. Linear accelerators can be used to produce higher energies, but this requires increasing their length.

Linear accelerators, in which there is very little radiation loss, are the most powerful and efficient electron accelerators; the largest of these, the Stanford Univ. linear accelerator (SLAC), completed in 1957, is 2 mi (3.2 km) long and produces 20-GeV—in nuclear physics energies are commonly measured in millions (MeV) or billions (GeV) of electron-volts (eV)—electrons. New linear machines differ from earlier electrostatic machines in that they use electric fields alternating at radio frequencies to accelerate the particles, instead of using high voltage. The acceleration tube has segments that are charged alternately positive and negative. When a group of particles passes through the tube, it is repelled by the segment it has left and is attracted by the segment it is approaching. Thus the final energy is attained by a series of pushes and pulls. Recently, linear accelerators have been used to accelerate heavy ions such as carbon, neon, and nitrogen.

Circular Accelerators

In order to reach high energy without the prohibitively long paths required of linear accelerators, E. O. Lawrence proposed (1932) that particles could be accelerated to high energies in a small space by making them travel in a circular or nearly circular path. In the cyclotron, which he invented, a cylindrical magnet bends the particle trajectories into a circular path whose radius depends on the mass of the particles, their velocity, and the strength of the magnetic field. The particles are accelerated within a hollow, circular, metal box that is split in half to form two sections, each in the shape of the capital letter D. A radio-frequency electric field is impressed across the gap between the D's so that every time a particle crosses the gap, the polarity of the D's is reversed and the particle gets an accelerating "kick." The key to the simplicity of the cyclotron is that the period of revolution of a particle remains the same as the radius of the path increases because of the increase in velocity. Thus, the alternating electric field stays in step with the particles as they spiral outward from the center of the cyclotron to its circumference. However, according to the theory of relativity the mass of a particle increases as its velocity approaches the speed of light; hence, very energetic, high-velocity particles will have greater mass and thus less acceleration, with the result that they will not remain in step with the field. For protons, the maximum energy attainable with an ordinary cyclotron is about 10 million electron-volts.

Two approaches exist for exceeding the relativistic limit for cyclotrons. In the synchrocyclotron, the frequency of the accelerating electric field steadily decreases to match the decreasing angular velocity of the protons. In the isochronous cyclotron, the magnet is constructed so the magnetic field is stronger near the circumference than at the center, thus compensating for the mass increase and maintaining a constant frequency of revolution. The first synchrocyclotron, built at the Univ. of California at Berkeley in 1946, reached energies high enough to create pions, thus inaugurating the laboratory study of the meson family of elementary particles.

Further progress in physics required energies in the GeV range, which led to the development of the synchrotron. In this device, a ring of magnets surrounds a doughnut-shaped vacuum tank. The magnetic field rises in step with the proton velocities, thus keeping them moving in a circle of nearly constant radius, instead of the widening spiral of the cyclotron. The entire center section of the magnet is eliminated, making it possible to build rings with diameters measured in miles. Particles must be injected into a synchrotron from another accelerator. The first proton synchrotron was the cosmotron at Brookhaven (N.Y.) National Laboratory, which began operation in 1952 and eventually attained an energy of 3 GeV. The 6.2-GeV synchrotron (the bevatron) at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory was used to discover the antiproton (see antiparticle).

The 500-GeV synchrotron at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory at Batavia, Ill., was built to be the most powerful accelerator in the world in the early 1970s; the ring has a circumference of approximately 6 kilometers, or 4 miles. The machine was upgraded in 1983 to accelerate protons and counterpropagating antiprotons to such enormous speeds that the ensuing impacts deliver energies of up to 2 trillion electron-volts (TeV)—hence the ring has been dubbed the Tevatron. The Tevatron is an example of a so-called colliding-beams machine, which is really a double accelerator that causes two separate beams to collide, either head-on or at a grazing angle. Because of relativistic effects, producing the same reactions with a conventional accelerator would require a single beam hitting a stationary target with much more than twice the energy of either of the colliding beams. Plans were made to build a huge accelerator in Waxahachie, Tex. Called the Superconducting Supercollider (SSC), a ring 87 kilometers (54 miles) in circumference lined with superconducting magnets (see superconductivity) would produce 40 TeV particle collisions. However, the program was ended in 1993 when government funding was stopped.

The synchrotron can be used to accelerate electrons but is inefficient. An electron moves much faster than a proton of the same energy and hence loses much more energy in synchrotron radiation. A circular machine used to accelerate electrons is the betatron, invented by Donald Kerst in 1939. Electrons are injected into a doughnut-shaped vacuum chamber that surrounds a magnetic field. The magnetic field is steadily increased, inducing a tangential electric field that accelerates the electrons (see induction).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Particle Accelerator  - 286 results

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...produce a beam of mesons which are half particle state and half antiparticle state . We now know that the particle decays slightly more often into positive...13.7 . We take a K + beam from a particle accelerator facility and run the beam into a...
...The largest linear accelerator is located at Stanford...Another design for particle accelerators is based on a circular...similar to a linear accelerator wound into a spiral...nets causes the particles to move in a circle...accelerates. In particle accelerators this is a problem...
...Segre, used the Bevatron particle accelerator at Berkeley, California...antiparticles and other subatomic particles. Some particles are their own antiparticles...emission Cosmic rays and particle accelerators are not the only sources...
...Tevatron particle accelerator at Fermilab in...the most powerful accelerator in the world...Tevatron. Uses of accelerators The most powerful particle accelerators are...ously unknown particles. Studying these...systems hv using particle detectors). There...simple types of accelerators are linear-they move particles in straight lines...tube is a linear accelerator in this sense...
...of another type of accelerator: the cyclotron. In the cyclotron, the particles describe a spiral...placed outside the accelerator. At the end of the...two generations of accelerators produced the major...of protons. The particle accelerators of the type invented...materials. The first accelerator built by Cockcroft...
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...hypothetical) spin zero particles ("boson"). This...indicated that anti-particles are a general feature...unique to the spin 1A particles (electron, proton...major high-energy particle accelerators and a staff of thousands...
...a remarkable focus particle in his field language...feel strongly about particles," to quote eminent...Developing and Applying a Particle Accelerator" and then to "Defining...Follingstads own particle accelerator registers and labels...wehinneh as focus particles (pp. 155-58...a "polar focus" particle, not a causal, asseverative...
...high-volume particle collectors (Sierra...min to recover particles by smooth sweeping...radiation (Pelletron Accelerator; National Electrostatics...5) urban air particles in RAW 264.7...the Pelletron Accelerator at UNAM, Mexico...Conference on Particle-Induced X...of high coarse particle concentrations...assessment of airborne particles in Mexico City...
...development of charged-particle accelerator technology in order...technology of charged-particle accelerators. Electrons, being the lightest charged-particles, radiate the most...types of low energy accelerators with excellent programmes...European Union, in accelerator-based science research...
...to accelerate elementary particles and collide them with other particles to investigate the interactions...accelerate a stream of charged particles to higher and higher energies...to the one state where the accelerator would be built. The technology of particle acceleration dictated that...
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...Worlds Largest Particle Accelerator Is a Lesson in...worlds largest particle accelerator...of subatomic particles known as protons...describing these particles, known as the "standard model of particle physics", was...
...collisions in particle accelerators has boosted the performance...collider at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab...old world record for particle-collision rates. For decades, particle physicists have used electron...control the properties of particles in low-energy accelerators, but they were daunted...
Giant Accelerator by Arthur Fisher FOR THE...made a major commitment to a particLe accelerator on foreign soiL...the European Laboratory for ParticLe Physics outside Geneva...physicists need to collide particles harder and harder to test...the "standard model" of particle physics. One key to this...
...and gluons, the massless particles that bind quarks together...Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility, or CEBAF, smashes...of laps. Until CEBAF, accelerators sent "batches" of electrons...greater speeds. But those accelerators shut down after each...superconductivity. Making the accelerator cavities out of superconducting...Hall C, with the simplest particle detectors, is in operation...
...reassuringly, within a few days, particle physicists had put up their...made at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois...have produced a trail of particles that really ought not to...chance that the trail of particles was just a fluke with absolutely...data coming out of our particle accelerators makes false alarms far...
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Particle Accelerators Wont Make Our Lives Easier...those great job titles: particle physicist. I think he was...talked us through the current particle accelerators as well as what...familiar with in our non-particle accelerating daily lives...accelerate some sub atomic particles at nearly the speed of light...
Fermilabs Accelerator Work Enters Next Phase...next generation of particle accelerators, preparing for the...radio-frequency accelerator test facility. Work...the shorter the accelerator can be, said Jerry...of other cryogenic accelerators, including those...
Rare Chance to Tour Particle Accelerator Offered. by Tona Kunz Byline...computer areas and a peek at the particle collider ring have been allowed...into the landmark Tevatron particle accelerator is made possible...involve shooting neutrino particles through a 450-mile tunnel...
...prefers to call himself a particle physicist, which is apparently...the professor makes their particles accelerate - and quite a...the Large Hadron Collider particle accelerator. She is a geek herself...the universe, by firing particles at great speed around a vast...
...More like a Pop Star Than a Particle Physicist (but Then He Did...prefers to call himself a particle physicist, which is apparently...the Large Hadron Collider particle accelerator. She is a geek herself...the universe, by firing particles at great speed around a vast...
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PARTICLE ACCELERATOR apparatus used...energetic charged particles and to direct them...hold it together. Accelerators are also needed...worlds particle accelerators are situated in...Serpukhov. Design of Particle Accelerators There are many types of accelerator designs, although...Only charged particles (most commonly...
FERMI NATIONAL ACCELERATOR LABORATORY (Fermilab...1968 as the National Accelerator Laboratory, renamed...study of elementary particles , principally through...Tevatron, a synchrotron particle accelerator completed in 1983...
ACCELERATOR see particle accelerator . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
LINEAR ACCELERATOR see particle accelerator . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...1950s these elementary particles were also being observed...laboratory as a result of particle collisions produced by a particle accelerator . One of the current frontiers...the study of elementary particles concerns the interface...
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