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Linear particle accelerator(Redirected from Linear accelerator)
A Linear particle accelerator is an electrical device for the acceleration of subatomic particles. It may be used to produce X-rays, by accelerating electrons into a target window, or for the production of high energy particles so that the results of particle collisions may be studied, usually with a bubble chamber or other device.
Construction and operation
HistoryThe first linear accelerators used only a single stage of acceleration, with a direct current potential providing the energy. This could be provided by a Van de Graaff generator or a voltage multiplier power supply. Such accelerators are severely limited in accelerating power since at high voltage energy will be lost due to corona discharge, with electrical energy dissapated into the surrounding atmosphere. Such devices are still used as ion injectors for other accelerating devices. The accelerating potential (in electron volts) is equal to the voltage potential (volts) between the ion source and the target. The maximum potential relative to ground potential is generally not limited by the generator(s) but rather by the tendency of voltage potential to leak away due to corona discharge. While various techniques may be applied to raise this maximum potential the structures required become impractically massive and/or expensive. Early multiple–stage accelerators were limited by the lack of suitable electron tubes capable of operating at high frequency and high power while maintaining both precise frequency and phase control. Various other types of accelerators such as the Cyclotron and Synchrocyclotron were developed to overcome these limitations. With the development of the high power klystron tube it became practical to continue the development of the linear accelerator (LINAC), first for use as a high speed injector for the synchrotron and finally as a high power accelerator for research use, culminating in the two mile long Stanford Linear Accelerator (SLAC). In the future the even larger International Linear Collider may be built. AdvantagesLINACs of appropriate design are capable of accelerating heavy ions to energies exceeding those available in ring-type accelerators, which are limited by the strength of the magnetic fields required to maintain the ions on a curved path. High power LINACs are also being developed for production of electrons at relativistic speeds, required since fast electrons traveling in an arc will lose energy through synchrotron radiation; this limits the maximum power that can be imparted to electrons in a synchrotron of given size. LINACs are also capable of prodigious output, producing a nearly continuous stream of particles, whereas a syncrotron will only periodically raise the particles to sufficient energy to merit a "shot" at the target. The high density of the output makes the LINAC particularly attractive for use in loading storage ring facilities with particles in preparation for particle to particle collisions. The high mass output also makes the device practical for the production of antimatter particles, which are generally difficult to obtain, being only a small fraction of a target's collision products. These may then be stored and further used to study matter-antimatter annihilation. As there are no primary bending magnets, this cost of an accelerator is reduced. Medical grade LINACs accelerate electrons using a complex bending magnet arrangement and a 6-30 million electron-volt potential to treat both benign and malignant disease. The reliability, flexibility and accuracy of the radiation beam produced has largely supplanted Cobalt therapy as a treatment tool. In addition, the device can simply be powered off when not in use; there is no source requiring heavy shielding. Disadvantages
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