What is Particle accelerator: Definition and 208 Discussions

A particle accelerator is a machine that uses electromagnetic fields to propel charged particles to very high speeds and energies, and to contain them in well-defined beams.Large accelerators are used for basic research in particle physics. The largest accelerator currently operating is the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) near Geneva, Switzerland, operated by the CERN. It is a collider accelerator, which can accelerate two beams of protons to an energy of 6.5 TeV and cause them to collide head-on, creating center-of-mass energies of 13 TeV. Other powerful accelerators are, RHIC at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York and, formerly, the Tevatron at Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois. Accelerators are also used as synchrotron light sources for the study of condensed matter physics. Smaller particle accelerators are used in a wide variety of applications, including particle therapy for oncological purposes, radioisotope production for medical diagnostics, ion implanters for manufacture of semiconductors, and accelerator mass spectrometers for measurements of rare isotopes such as radiocarbon. There are currently more than 30,000 accelerators in operation around the world.There are two basic classes of accelerators: electrostatic and electrodynamic (or electromagnetic) accelerators. Electrostatic accelerators use static electric fields to accelerate particles. The most common types are the Cockcroft–Walton generator and the Van de Graaff generator. A small-scale example of this class is the cathode ray tube in an ordinary old television set. The achievable kinetic energy for particles in these devices is determined by the accelerating voltage, which is limited by electrical breakdown. Electrodynamic or electromagnetic accelerators, on the other hand, use changing electromagnetic fields (either magnetic induction or oscillating radio frequency fields) to accelerate particles. Since in these types the particles can pass through the same accelerating field multiple times, the output energy is not limited by the strength of the accelerating field. This class, which was first developed in the 1920s, is the basis for most modern large-scale accelerators.
Rolf Widerøe, Gustav Ising, Leó Szilárd, Max Steenbeck, and Ernest Lawrence are considered pioneers of this field, conceiving and building the first operational linear particle accelerator, the betatron, and the cyclotron.
Because the target of the particle beams of early accelerators was usually the atoms of a piece of matter, with the goal being to create collisions with their nuclei in order to investigate nuclear structure, accelerators were commonly referred to as atom smashers in the 20th century. The term persists despite the fact that many modern accelerators create collisions between two subatomic particles, rather than a particle and an atomic nucleus.

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  1. T

    Special relativity and particle accelerator

    Homework Statement (a) A spaceship at rest in a certain reference frame S is given a speed increment of 0.50c. Relative to its new frame, it is then given a further 0.50c increment.This process is continued until its speed with respect to its original frame S exceeds 0.999c. How many...
  2. D

    Engineering Career path for particle accelerator engineering?

    I'm currently in year 12 (studying IB with hl physics, maths and chemistry) in the UK and am starting to look at uni courses. For a few years now I have been absolutely fascinated by the particle physics/quantum side of physics. At the movement I would love to work in research in this sort of...
  3. Armando Valle

    A How can i build a homemade particle accelerator?

    Hello people, i was thinking about building a homemade particle accelerator but i do not know the materials and specifications to build one, can you guys help me know what thing do i need to buy and how to make one? Thanks
  4. SheriffPeabody

    B If Higgs has mass of 125GeV why did the LHC need 3.5TeV?

    Hi, I've tried to find an answer to this question, sorry if it's already been asked. I'm sure I have misunderstood something important here, but if the Higgs was found to have a mass of 125GeV, why did we need such a powerful collider to find it? (I think the LHC was running at 3.5TeV when they...
  5. LarryS

    Particle Accelerator for Uncharged Particles?

    Particle accelerators use the electromagnetic field to accelerate charged particles. Would it be possible to build a particle accelerator for uncharged particles? Say we are given a narrow beam of neutrons. How could we accelerate them so that the accelerated particles were still in a...
  6. Pleiades

    I Exploring the Effects of Voltage and Time on Lichtenberg Figures in Acrylic

    If you aren't already aware, there are some folks who use a couple million volt particle accelerator to make lichtemberg figures in acrylic. If you watch some of their videos over at http://www.capturedlightning.com/frames/lichtenbergs.html#Make it looks like they only leave the acrylic under...
  7. U

    Particle accelerators safety systems

    Hello, I am looking for scientific articles about particle accelerators safety systems, that posted at scientific journals. The articles I'm looking for should be about safety while the operation of the accelerator, like monitoring the radiation that could be around - and the process that...
  8. Ryan Reed

    B How would you calculate RF cavity dimensions?

    In a linear accelerator that use cavities and microwaves or radio waves to accelerate particles, how would one find dimensions such as cavity openings, cavity size, length between cavities, etc.
  9. K

    Basic particle accelerator - escape speed (grade 12)

    Homework Statement The device has two parallel plates, one positively charged and one negatively. The positive plate has a hole to allow electrons to fire out of it. b) How can the device be modified to accelerate protons? c) How does the escape velocity of a proton compare to that of an...
  10. S

    Particle accelerator based nuclear fusion?

    I do think that the idea I had recently and one that I have been pondering about since is something mundane. Specifically because its so simple. Yet its an abstract one that I would like to know more about it from someone who can take the time to think about it and write a paragraph or two. In...
  11. E

    Linear particle accelerator design

    I have a qustion about two types of accelerating designs. In these types of design the plates get longer or spaced apart because the frequency of the RF power is constant but the particle is acclerated so it covers more distance in less time. The other type of design looks like this: My...
  12. xpell

    Why particle acceleration collisions don't cause explosions?

    Please be patient with my ignorance. :) I have just learned in the LHC's own website ( http://lhc-machine-outreach.web.cern.ch/lhc-machine-outreach/beam.htm ) that their proton beams traveling at 0.999999991c carry about 362 MJ of energy, equivalent to 77.4 kg of TNT. These beams seem to be...
  13. T

    Difference between betatrons and cyclotrons

    Hello, I was wondering if anyone would be able to tell me the key differences between a betatron accelerator and a cyclotron accelerator. Thanks :)
  14. Tiggy B

    Find velocity of an accelerated proton using kinetic energy

    Homework Statement So I'm trying to find the final velocity of a proton that is being accelerated by a particle accelerator, just before it collides with a particle. All I have is its kinetic energy just before collision: 4.7066×10^(-13) J. I thought I should use KE = 1/2 mv^2 but then...
  15. J

    Proton Plasma Wakefield Accelerators

    Why do all wakefield accelerators seem to use either electrons or positrons? Is there any reason you would have difficulty creating a laser driven proton plasma wakefield accelerator? (that is, in comparison to an electron accelerator) Thanks.
  16. BiGyElLoWhAt

    Exploiting time varying B field to employ vacuum acceleratio

    So I've been wanting to build a particle accelerator for a while, and have kind of been brain storming ideas to make it work. I've been recently trying to figure out how to get the actual acceleration to happen. I have a few ideas, but the one that I like (assuming it's possible) is using a...
  17. M

    Physics Accelerator Physics PhD Competitivity and study in the USA

    Hello, I have just graduated from university with a decent (but not outstanding) result: 2:1, not far off of a first, with good references. I did my final year project on accelerator physics and I am currently working at the same university over the summer doing similar work on an accelerator...
  18. C

    Nuclear fusion using miniature optical particle accelerator?

    Greetings I am not a physicist myself, so please forgive me, if my question/proposition will sound naif. I noticed some articles about accelerating electrons using laser and glass gratings: http://phys.org/news/2013-09-chip.html http://phys.org/news/2013-10-particles-compact-particle.html I...
  19. N

    Higgs particle and standard model Higgs particle difference?

    Hey physics enthusiasts, I have been reading and watching various videos, which talks about the possibility that the Higgs particle which was discovered by collisions in the large hadron collider(LHC) may not be the standard model Higgs particle. What does this mean? What is the difference...
  20. O

    Help regarding intuition on particle accelerators

    I realize there have been multiple threads on this and believe me I tried my hardest to find these answers from them and other resources. Questions: 1) Is the van de graaff generator a particle collider? I am under the impression that it is meant to follow up on the Cockroft-Walton accelerator...
  21. jlefevre76

    Can Relativistic Propulsion Take Us Beyond Our Solar System?

    Okay, I tried searching for this in the forums and didn't really find what I was looking for. So, I'll start a new thread and if anybody has seen this before, feel free to drop a link to an old thread or whatever. Many of our older space probes use/used thermoelectric radioisotope batteries to...
  22. Z

    Question about Resonance Cross Sections

    Hi All, I have a question about resonance cross sections. I have been doing the design work on the reactor I want to propose for testing at Oak Ridge National Labs, and have run into a problem. It is an accelerator driven reactor transmuting thorium into uranium, then burning the uranium by...
  23. B

    Proton through a Particle Accelerator

    This is 2 questions in 1 go. So my first question is how much does a Proton weigh? My second question is, what is the mass of the Proton in a particle accelerator going nearly the speed of light. I know that as you speed something up its mass increases. Also could you show me how you came to...
  24. N

    Does radioactive decay slow in a particle accelerator

    I am a non physicist-scientist, but landed here searching the internet for this answer. Has it ever been done? Thank you for any answers.
  25. wabbit

    Experimental Black Hole Physics

    (I don't know if this is the best place to ask this, if not please feel free to move it elsewhere or delete it.) A number of Quantum Gravity papers explore the evolution of Black Holes and their potential transition to White Holes, and some discuss the possibility of astronomical observation of...
  26. T

    Particle Accelerator Experiment

    My 12 year old son recently created a homemade particle accelerator, with help from his grandfather, for his upcoming science fair. Below is his description and youtube video link. Any insight would be helpful. "Hi, I just made this particle accelerator and I was confused on what I was...
  27. M

    What Are the Uses of Cryogenics in Large Particle Accelerators?

    I do know that for large particle accelerators ( LHC, Fermilab) that the use of cryogenics is used, which is anything below -150C. LHC for example uses liquid helium to create a temperature of about 4K. For smaller particle accelerators though, let's say around 3m in diameter, is the use of...
  28. P

    Are FFAGs Being Overlooked in Proton Therapy Technology?

    Hi everyone, I'm new at Physics Forum. I'm looking at the different accelerator technologies being used in proton therapy across the world. One of the more recent technologies I have come across is FFAG (fixed field, alternating gradient). It seems to have a lot of advantages over...
  29. J

    Relativistic motion in a particle accelerator: Rate of Energy Loss

    Homework Statement (a) Consider a 10-Mev proton in a cyclotron of radius .5m. Use the formula (F1) to calculate the rate of energy loss in eV/s due to radiation. (b) Suppose that we tried to produce electrons with the same kinetic energy in a circular machine of the same radius. In this case...
  30. M

    Conservation of linear momentum particle accelerator

    Homework Statement You are at the controls of a particle accelerator, sending a beam of 3.60×10^7 protons (mass m ) at a gas target of an unknown element. Your detector tells you that some protons bounce straight back after a collision with one of the nuclei of the unknown element. All such...
  31. J

    Particle creation in an accelerating Universe?

    Hi, I am interested to hear what people think of the following argument that in an accelerating Universe virtual particles that are separated by the Hubble radius R(t) or more cannot annihilate and thus become real particles. Thus, by the uncertainty principle, particle pairs with energy E...
  32. dkotschessaa

    Particle Accelerators and Angular momentum (Crazy question)

    Prompted by my visit to Fermilab last week... I'm sure somebody has thought of this, but I'd be interested on hearing what the challenges would be. So, in order for us to accelerate particles to higher and higher speeds, we are needing larger accelerators. But what if, in order to get...
  33. R

    Accelerating charged particle radiation reaction

    It is known that if a charged particle accelerates then it emits electromagnetic wave (energy). If so then this means that the work we do on particle, W=F*s, doesn't all go to particles kinetic energy, E=0.5*m*v^2. Then this means that Newton's F=m*a doesn't hold for charged objects, particles...
  34. O

    Particle Accelerator problem with a proton beam hitting a target

    Homework Statement In a certain particle accelerator, a current of 300μA is carried by a 4.00-MeV proton beam that has a radius of 1.30 mm. The mass of a proton is 1.67 x 10-27kg. If the beam hits a target, how many protons hit the target in 3s? Homework Equations The only equation that...
  35. A

    Particle Accelerators effects on Earth

    Since particle accelerators need to be a cyclical structure in order to generate the collisions it has associated to it an angular momentum. Due the conservation of angular momentum we use the rotational kinetic energy of Earth itself to supply them. Take, for example, a particle accelerator...
  36. A

    Acceleration of a static test-particle

    What is the correct expression for the acceleration of a static test-particle in coordinate time according to the Schwarzshild solution? I am a bit confused. I would like it to be the same as classically, ## d\bar{v}/dt=-\frac{GM}{r^2}\hat{r} ##, but according to "reflections on relativity"...
  37. C

    Uncertainty principle and particle accelerators

    Fairly simple question but it's been bugging me for a while: Particle accelerators such as the LHC publish some impressive images of the tracks of particles in their detectors. Can someone explain why that is possible considering the uncertainty principle?
  38. W

    Galaxy size particle accelerator

    It is said that it takes a particle accelerator the size of a milky way to probe the Planck length. But with the resources available in the universe and with other billions year A.D. civilizations out there existing. What if they had created one already. Is there any galaxy out there that look...
  39. H

    Initial acceleration of a charged particle

    Homework Statement If sphere 2 were free to move its initial acceleration would be ___m/s^2 Homework Equations Two small spheres carrying charges q1 = 7.68 µC and q2 = 5.74 µC are separated by 19.9 cm. The mass of sphere 1 is 10.5 g and the mass of sphere 2 is 15.2 g. The Attempt at...
  40. J

    Higgs boson only interacts with accelerating particles?

    What is the fundamental rationale for why particles moving through the Higgs ocean would only interact if they are accelerating?
  41. N

    Particle accelerator (Where to get the glass tube?)

    Hello there! I study communications engineering and got really fascinated by magnetic fields. I started to do my own bit of "research" or "further understanding" how magnets work, how the field is influenced and what can the field influence. After doing so I got fascinated by particle...
  42. E

    Particle on a wedge relative acceleration

    Homework Statement A smooth wedge of mass 2m and slope 45 degrees is placed on a smooth horizontal surface. A particle of mass m is placed on the inclined face of the wedge. The system is released from rest. (i) Show on separate diagrams the forces acting...
  43. R

    Particle Accelerator Project: Building a Linear Accelerator or Cyclotron

    Hi! I'm interested in building a particle accelerator... maybe a linear accelerator or a cyclotron. What do you suggest as a starting project? The linear accelerator or the cyclotron? About the linear accelerator, is it suitable only for electrons? Is it possible to build a small (and...
  44. D

    Understanding Acceleration and Motion with a Constant Acceleration Formula

    Homework Statement the acceleration of a particle is given by a=B√t where B=1.25, with the appropriate units. At t=0s, v=7m/s and x=1.5m a) what are the dimensions for "B" appearing in the formula a=B√t ? b) what is the speed as a function of time? c) What is the position as a...
  45. D

    Can a Homemade Particle Accelerator be Built Safely and Effectively?

    Hello! Long time reader, first time poster. First, I am sorry for my bad English, but I haven`t practiced from a very long time and this is not my native language. So, I am studing Physics. I and a classmate make DIY projects. We`ve made quite a big list of things - R/C models, tesla coils...
  46. S

    What are the job opportunities for a MechE at a particle accelerator?

    So I'm curious about what kind of jobs a MechE would have at a particle accelerator? I'm planning on Double majoring in Meche And Physics in undergrad, and have hopes of getting Masters in MechE Machine Design and ElecE Power Systems. Any advice on the matter is much appreciated.
  47. T

    Concepts behind particle accelerators

    I'm wondering about linear particle accelerators. THey're something I've been researching for a while, and I found two conflicting ideas. On one source, it states that all you essentially need is a long tube and a high voltage power supply. So, if I had a voltage multiplier and assigned the...
  48. F

    How to block off charge particles from an electron accelerator?

    Assuming an electron accelerator is firing electrons at a designated location to generate current. Is it possible to block it off before it reaches that location like with an iron shield or somesort. Is there a simpler or harder way to do this and is it possible to block it off completely? Thanks.
  49. W

    Radiation in particle accelerator

    HI If in particle accelerator particles radiates EM waves then why electron does not in its orbit.
  50. W

    Radiation emitted by particles in accelerator

    Hi, i heard diameter of Particle accelerator is in Km - to reduce the centripetal acceleration of particles being accelerated - is it true?
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