A Linear or Circular Accelerator?

Next Back Home I'M LOST!


All accelerators are either linear or circular, the difference being whether the particle is shot like a bullet from a gun (the linear accelerator) or whether the particle is twirled in a very fast circle, receiving a bunch of little kicks each time around (the circular accelerator). Both types accelerate particles by pushing them with an electric-field wave.


Linear accelerators (linacs) are used for fixed-target experiments, as injectors to circular accelerators, or as linear colliders.
Fixed target:
Injector to a circular accelerator:
Linear collider:



The beams from a circular accelerator (synchrotron) can be used for colliding-beam experiments or extracted from the ring for fixed-target experiments:
Colliding beams:
Extracted to hit a fixed target:

The particles in a circular accelerator go around in circles because large magnets tweak the particle's path enough to keep it in the accelerator.


Next Back

How do a circular accelerator's magnets make particles go in a circle?