THE LINEAR ACCELERATOR
This type of accelerator was invented
by Wideroe, and is the first of the important modern accelerators. It accelerates particles
down a straight tube without the use of very high voltages. Some of these machines are very
large, the one at Stanford, USA, being over 2 miles long.
The particles move down a vacuum tube under the
influence of a travelling wave, which appears regularly with correct phase at the electrode
gaps. As the particles reach each gap they are given a "kick" by the accelerating
field.
Alternate pairs of electrodes are connected together and an a.c. signal applied
to them.
Notice that the electrodes have to get longer as the particle gets further
down the tube, since the particles will travel further during each cycle of the field. At very high
velocities relativistic effects have to be allowed for.
With electron linear accelerators
the particles are injected at about 4 MeV from a small electrostatic accelerator, and in the
Stanford machine they are accelerated to energies in excess of 10 GeV (1000 MeV). The
average beam current is about 15
mA.
(See also Cyclotron,
Synchrotron)
A VERSION IN WORD IS AVAILABLE ON THE SCHOOLPHYSICS CD