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Linear particle accelerator
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==Construction and operation== [[Image:Aust.-Synchrotron,-Quadrupole-Magnets-of-Linac,-14.06.2007.jpg|250px|right|thumb|[[Quadrupole magnet]]s surrounding the linac of the [[Australian Synchrotron]] are used to help [[Focus (optics)|focus]] the electron beam]] [[File:SLAC_National_Accelerator_Laboratory_Aerial_2.png|thumb|Building covering the 2 mile (3.2 km) beam tube of the [[Stanford Linear Accelerator]] (SLAC) at Menlo Park, California, the second most powerful linac in the world. It has about 80,000 accelerating electrodes and could accelerate electrons to 50 [[GeV]] ]] A linear particle accelerator consists of the following parts: *A straight hollow pipe [[vacuum chamber]] which contains the other components. It is evacuated with a [[vacuum pump]] so that the accelerated particles will not collide with air molecules. The length will vary with the application. If the device is used for the production of X-rays for inspection or therapy, then the pipe may be only 0.5 to 1.5 meters long.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Podgorsak |first1=E B |title=Radiation Oncology Physics |date=2005 |publisher=[[International Atomic Energy Agency]] |location=Vienna |isbn=92-0-107304-6 |page=138 |url=https://www.iaea.org/publications/7086/radiation-oncology-physics |language=en |chapter=Treatment Machines for External Beam Radiotherapy}}</ref> If the device is to be an injector for a [[synchrotron]], it may be about ten meters long.<ref>{{cite conference |url=https://s3.cern.ch/inspire-prod-files-b/bf2698b68b2ac10829c592a2137d3ee2 |title=Linear Accelerator Injectors for Proton Synchrotrons |first=J P |last=Blewett |author= |author-link= |date=11 June 1956 |conference=CERN Symposium on High Energy Accelerators and Pion Physics |conference-url= |editor=Edouard Regenstreif |volume=1 |edition= |book-title= |publisher=CERN |archive-url= |archive-date= |location=Geneva |pages=159β166 |format= |id= |isbn= |bibcode= |oclc= |doi=10.5170/CERN-1956-025 |access-date= |quote= |language= |page= |at= |trans-title=}}</ref> If the device is used as the primary accelerator for nuclear particle investigations, it may be several thousand meters long.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Weise |first1=Hans |last2=Decking |first2=Winfried |title=The world's longest superconducting linac |url=https://cerncourier.com/a/the-worlds-longest-superconducting-linac/ |website=[[CERN Courier]] |publisher=IOP Publishing |date=10 July 2017}}</ref> *The particle source ''(S)'' at one end of the chamber which produces the [[charged particle]]s which the machine accelerates. The design of the source depends on the particle that is being accelerated. [[Electron]]s are generated by a [[cold cathode]], a [[hot cathode]], a [[photocathode]], or [[RF antenna ion source|radio frequency ion sources]]. [[Proton]]s are generated in an [[ion source]], which can have many different designs. If heavier particles are to be accelerated, (e.g., [[uranium]] ions), a specialized ion source is needed. The source has its own high voltage supply to inject the particles into the beamline.<ref>{{cite arXiv |last=Faircloth |first=D C |author-link= |eprint=2103.13231 |title=Particle Sources |class= physics.acc-ph|date=24 March 2021 }}</ref> *Extending along the pipe from the source is a series of open-ended cylindrical electrodes ''(C1, C2, C3, C4)'', whose length increases progressively with the distance from the source. The particles from the source pass through these electrodes. The length of each electrode is determined by the frequency and power of the driving power source and the particle to be accelerated, so that the particle passes through each electrode in exactly one-half cycle of the accelerating voltage. The mass of the particle has a large effect on the length of the cylindrical electrodes; for example an electron is considerably lighter than a proton and so will generally require a much smaller section of cylindrical electrodes as it accelerates very quickly. *A target with which the particles collide, located at the end of the accelerating electrodes. If electrons are accelerated to produce X-rays, then a water-cooled [[tungsten]] target is used. Various target materials are used when protons or other nuclei are accelerated, depending upon the specific investigation. Behind the target are various detectors to detect the particles resulting from the collision of the incoming particles with the atoms of the target. Many linacs serve as the initial accelerator stage for larger particle accelerators such as [[synchrotron]]s and [[storage ring]]s, and in this case after leaving the electrodes the accelerated particles enter the next stage of the accelerator. *An [[electronic oscillator]] and [[amplifier]] ''(G)'' which generates a radio frequency [[alternating current|AC]] voltage of high potential (usually thousands of volts) which is applied to the cylindrical electrodes. This is the accelerating voltage which produces the electric field which accelerates the particles. Opposite phase voltage is applied to successive electrodes. A high power accelerator will have a separate amplifier to power each electrode, all synchronized to the same frequency. As shown in the animation, the oscillating voltage applied to alternate cylindrical electrodes has opposite polarity (180Β° [[out of phase]]), so adjacent electrodes have opposite voltages. This creates an oscillating [[electric field]] ''(E)'' in the gap between each pair of electrodes, which exerts force on the particles when they pass through, imparting energy to them by accelerating them. The particle source injects a group of particles into the first electrode once each cycle of the voltage, when the charge on the electrode is opposite to the charge on the particles. Each time the particle bunch passes through an electrode, the oscillating voltage changes polarity, so when the particles reach the gap between electrodes the electric field is in the correct direction to accelerate them. Therefore, the particles accelerate to a faster speed each time they pass between electrodes; there is little electric field inside the electrodes so the particles travel at a constant speed within each electrode. The particles are injected at the right time so that the oscillating voltage differential between electrodes is maximum as the particles cross each gap. If the peak voltage applied between the electrodes is <math>V_p</math> volts, and the charge on each particle is <math>q</math> [[elementary charge]]s, the particle gains an equal increment of energy of <math>qV_p</math> [[electron volt]]s when passing through each gap. Thus the output energy of the particles is :<math>E = qNV_p</math> electron volts, where <math>N</math> is the number of accelerating electrodes in the machine. At speeds near the speed of light, the incremental velocity increase will be small, with the energy appearing as an increase in the mass of the particles. In portions of the accelerator where this occurs, the tubular electrode lengths will be almost constant. Additional magnetic or electrostatic lens elements may be included to ensure that the beam remains in the center of the pipe and its electrodes. Very long accelerators may maintain a precise alignment of their components through the use of servo systems guided by a laser beam.
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