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قراءة كتاب LRL Accelerators, The 184-Inch Synchrocyclotron

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LRL Accelerators, The 184-Inch Synchrocyclotron

LRL Accelerators, The 184-Inch Synchrocyclotron

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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experiments performed there are concerned with μ mesons. The μ meson (muon) is a particle created in the decay of a π meson and is the principal constituent of cosmic rays striking the surface of the earth. The muon is unstable, eventually undergoing a radioactive decay into an electron. Although the muon does not experience nuclear forces, it can interact weakly with nuclei. The behavior of the muon is well understood, but its role as one of the elementary particles is unknown. That is, if the muon did not exist, what effect would this have on the structure of matter? The answer to this question, among others, is being sought by physicists using the 184-inch cyclotron.

Biophysics

Experiments in biophysics are conducted in the medical cave. In these the interest lies not in nuclear interactions but in the effect of ionizing radiation on living tissue. High-energy beams of particles can be used for selective destruction of specific areas of the brain. This permits physiological mapping of the functions of the brain in experimental animals. It further offers a therapeutic approach to the treatment of brain tumors. One of the important investigational programs is concerned with the relationship of the pituitary gland to the growth rate of certain cancers and to some endocrine disorders.

Nuclear Chemistry

For techniques of radiochemistry to be employed successfully, high interaction rates (and therefore high beam intensities) are needed. For this reason, chemistry targets are usually inserted right into the cyclotron so that they can be bombarded directly by the circulating beam. After the bombardment is completed the target is removed from the cyclotron. It is then taken to a chemistry laboratory and subjected to detailed chemical procedures. Individual elements are removed, and the radioactive isotopes of each element are identified by quantitative counting techniques. In some cases a mass spectrometer is used to analyze the products. Many deductions about the nature of the breakup of the target nucleus can be drawn from the pattern of the observed radioactive products. Sometimes the nucleus splits almost in half. This is called fission. More frequently smaller parts of the nucleus are split off. Two general types of reactions, known as spallation and fragmentation, are distinguished. One of the goals of this research is to learn more about the constitution of the nucleus and of the forces which bind the particles in the interior of the nucleus.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] The grants were as follows: Rockefeller Foundation—$1,150,000; John and Mary Markle Foundation—$25,000; The Research Corporation—$50,000. The University of California added a guarantee of $175,000 to bring the total building fund to $1,400,000.

[2] In the first cyclotrons the electrodes were shaped like the letter "D."

[3] We have the values H = 15,000 gauss, e = 4.8 × 10-10 electrostatic units, and m = 1.6 × 10-24 gram. To find f, we write

f  
=    15,000 (4.8) 10-10

2 (3.14)(1.6) 10-24 (3) 1010
  ,
 
f   =  23.7 Mc.

[4] A deuteron is the nucleus of an atom of heavy hydrogen and contains one proton and one neutron; it carries a single positive electric charge. An alpha particle is the nucleus of a helium atom and is made up of two protons and two neutrons; it carries two positive charges.

[5] The machine is equipped for helium-3 operation, but to date it has not been used for that purpose.

[6] Mesons are elementary particles intermediate in mass between the electron and proton.

[7] It may be interesting to note that the π0 meson was discovered with this cyclotron in 1950. This was the first particle to be discovered with an accelerator. All particles that had been previously discovered were observed first in cosmic rays or some other form of natural radiation.



BIBLIOGRAPHY

  1. Gerald A. Behman, Particle Accelerators: I. Bibliography, II. List of Accelerator Installations, UCRL-8050, January 1, 1958.
  2. Samuel Glasstone, The Acceleration of Charged Particles, in Sourcebook on Atomic Energy, Second Edition (Van Nostrand, Princeton, 1958), Ch. IX.
  3. M. S. Livingston, High-Energy Accelerators (Interscience Publishers, New York, 1954).
  4. M. Stanley Livingston and Edwin M. McMillan, History of the Cyclotron, Physics Today 12, 18-34 (October 1959).
  5. E. M. McMillan, Particle Accelerators, in Experimental Nuclear Physics, Emilio Segrè, Editor, Vol. III (Wiley, New York, 1959), Part XIII.
  6. Bob H. Smith et al., The Electrical Aspects of the UCRL 740-Mev Synchrocyclotron, UCRL-3779 Rev., October 2, 1957.
  7. Robert L. Thornton, Frequency-Modulation and Radiofrequency System for the Modified Berkeley Cyclotron, UCRL-3362, April 3, 1956.
  8. Robert R. Wilson, Particle Accelerators, Scientific American 198, 64-76 (March 1958).


APPENDIX

SUMMARY OF SPECIFICATIONS

Present fields of research % of time
Nuclear physics 86
Nuclear chemistry 2
Biophysics 12
Scheduled operation 156 hours/week

Performance

Internal Beams
  Protons Deuterons Alpha

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