10 Million Million Volts or Bust… Tim Koeth April 29, 2008 Inspiration and Determination: A Historical Path to Higher Energies The history of accelerator physics.

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Transcript 10 Million Million Volts or Bust… Tim Koeth April 29, 2008 Inspiration and Determination: A Historical Path to Higher Energies The history of accelerator physics.

10 Million Million Volts
or Bust…
Tim Koeth
April 29, 2008
Inspiration and Determination:
A Historical Path to Higher Energies
The history of accelerator physics has
been one of adventure, bravado, and
sometimes shear luck. Some say
accelerator physics is just a discipline of
engineering, but in fact advancement in
the field has always been from the finger
tips of physicists, well mostly…
LHC
Fermilab
Accelerator physics has been a staircase
evolution: Inspiration followed by
determination over and over again.
I am going to give a brief over view of the
past 80 years.
In 1929 the motto was “10 Million Volts or
Bust”; in 2008 it is 10 Million Million Volts
or bust.
A Livingston Plot
“Start the Ball Rolling”
1927: Lord Rutherford requested a “copious supply” of
projectiles more energetic than natural alpha and beta
particles. At the opening of their High Tension Laboratory,
Rutherford went on to reiterate the goal:
What we require is an apparatus to give us
a potential of the order of 10 million volts
which can be safely accommodated in a
reasonably sized room and operated by a
few kilowatts of power. We require too an
exhausted tube capable of withstanding this
voltage… I see no reason why such a
requirement cannot be made practical.1
MANY FAILED ATTEMPTS
Just one example:
1928: Curt Urban, Arno Brasch, and Fritz Lange successfully achieved 15 MV by harnessing
lightning in the Italian Alps !2
The two who survived the experiment went on to design an accelerator tube capable
of withstanding that voltage.
Cockcroft & Walton’s Voltage Multiplier:
Cockcroft
Rutherford
Walton
C&W 1951 Nobel Prize
Attributed with being the first to artificially disintegrate nuclei.
The multiplier worked, but is generally limited to 750kV. A CW stack begins the Fermilab chain of accelerators
Wideroe Linac
1929: Rolf Wideroe
R. Wideroe proposed an accelerator by
using an alternating voltage across
several accelerating “gaps.”
It was not without a myriad of problems
- Focusing of the beam
- Vacuum leaks
- Oscillating high voltages
- Length
- Imagination
His professor refused any further work because
it was “sure to fail.”
Never the less, thankfully Wideroe still published his
idea in Archiv fur Electrotechnic
Wideroe in the 1960’s having
the last laugh…
Linear Accelerators
SLAC – Stanford California
2 miles long
50 GeV
Wideroe won the Wilson Accelerator
Prize in 1992
The proposed International Linear Collider
33 km long
Inspiration: Ernest Orlando Lawrence
In April 1929, UC Berkley’s youngest Physics professor
happened across Archiv fur Electrotechnic.
Not able to read German he just looked at the diagrams
and pictures of the journal.
1939 Nobel Prize
Immediately after seeing Wideroe’s schematic,
Ernest fully comprehended it’s implications.
1929: The Cyclotron
Lawrence quickly jotted down:
Fr 
mV 2
r
mV
r
qB
and equated with
FB  qVB
and substituted V in terms of
“R cancels R !”
qB
f 
2m
The Cyclotron Frequency
and solved for r:
V
  2f 
r
Determination: The Grad Student
M. Stanley Livingston
High Voltage DEE
Dummy DEE
M. Stanley Livingston (GS)
Ernest Lawrence
The First Operational Cyclotron
Determination: Weak Focusing
- Although the cyclotron worked, the beam intensity was very weak. Lawrence 
- Lawrence: wire grids and iron shims
Livingston removed the grids while Lawrence was out of town  beam intensity shot up.
Livingston took this remarkable finding to Lawrence. To which Lawrence responded:
“It’s obvious what happening…”
Intentionally introduce radial B-field component at the cost of an vertical gradient: to be coined weak focusing.
Seemed to be No Limit With Focusing …
Lawrence believed the only limit on energy was the size of the
magnet.
- 27-inch ( 5MeV ) cyclotron - construction
- 60-inch (16 MeV) cyclotron - design
- 184-inch (100 MeV ) cyclotron - fantasy
Hans Bethe disagreed !  practical only to 20 MeV for protons.
qB
f 
2m
Characteristically, Ernest Lawrence was not dissuaded & proceeded full
steam… “there is always more than one way to skin a cat.” – EOL
Weak focusing could only go so far..
For a sense of scale: I am sitting in the magnetic gap of Enrico Fermi’s
Cyclotron shortly before it was dismantled.
The greater the energy, the larger the radius, but the gap (AKA aperture) had to
correspondingly grow to produce the needed gradient. Thus the magnets were getting
impractically large.
We have to pause for World War II…
In Parallel: Robert J. Van de Graff
1931-4
Van de Graff (VDG) achieved 1.5 MV in 1931, by charge
exchange onto metal spheres. The “Van de Graff” worked,
but progress towards higher voltages was slow…
He went on to propose two 20 foot spheres on 20 foot towers
capable of 10 MeV.
The resulting awesome VDG installation at MIT stood 43 feet
about the ground and the spheres were 15 feet in diameter.
It promised 10 MV, but was not realized until after WWII.
Simple construction: many labs could easily obtain a VDG
VDG generators are still used today
- they can provide very mono-energetic beam
- only mAmps of beam current
- the biggest are limited to about 25MeV
Inspiration: Phase Stability beats Relativity
Post WWII: Return to circular accelerators:
Edwin McMillan of UC Berkley, and the Russian V.I. Veksler independently discovered Phase stability in 1945.
Simply stated the principle of Phase Stability is:
-The synchronous particle arrives at each successive accelerating gap at the same phase, incurring the same incremental
acceleration.
- Slow traveling ions arrive at the next gap “late” & receive more push
-Fast traveling ions arrive at the next gap “early” & receive less push
Thus, a “band” of ions continuously oscillate about and follow the phase of “stability” during acceleration.
The stability was robust enough to allow adiabatic changes in the accelerating frequency: enabling the oscillating voltage to change with the
relativistic mass increase.
The cat was skinned !
McMillan proposed the synchrotron in a letter to Phys Rev in 1945 & won the Nobel Prize in 1951 (for chemistry)
The Synchrotron:
-Constant radius:
- Inject a low energy beam and accelerate up
- Ramp B-field & modulate accelerating frequency
- Extract and send beam to target
- repeat
- Beam has pulsed structure as a result
Berkeley Bevatron
10,000 turns: Still need transverse focusing
Brobeck, Lawrence, McMillan, and
Cooksey sitting in the large
aperture of the Bevatron
Grad Student Bob Wilson was fired several times by Lawrence, the final time it was for leaving a 2x4 in
the vacuum chamber of the Bevatron.
Inspiration: The Era of Strong Focusing
-1953: E. D. Courant and H. S. Snyder of
BNL discovered that rotating one of their
weak focusing cosmotron magnets would
create a strong focus in one plane.
-Further investigation showed that
periodically alternating the “weak focusing”
gradient magnets had net focusing effect
Analogous to series of converging and
that was much stronger. Hence, the
diverging lenses to produce a net focusing
magnet’s aperture could be greatly
effect.
reduced. (Courant won the Wilson Accelerator Prize in 1987)
A Slight Embarrassment …
During a 1953 visit to the US, shortly after
Courant, Livingston & Snyder published their
results in Phys. Rev., the Greek owner of an
elevator repair company, Nicholas Christofilos,
read their article at a Brooklyn library.
Christofilos marched out to BNL, and pointed
out to them that he not only sent this idea to
them in a 1950 letter, but that he held a US
patent on the principle.
Christofilos was immediately offered a
position at BNL !
Ultimately a settlement was made for the
rights to strong focusing.
Nicholas Christofilos
Strong Focusing & Synchrotrons
- strong focusing + synchrotrons realized the goal of “unlimited” size 
thus unlimited achievable energy.
Many accelerators types have benefitted from strong focusing, but since the 1950’s
the synchrotron has been at the energy frontier being the workhorse HEP
community.
The first operational strong focusing synchrotron was Cornell’s 1.2 GeV. The
machine, already under construction under Bob Wilson, was retrofitted with
poletips to be a strong focusing machine.
400 GeV synchrotron dipole
magnet. (Quads not shown)
400 MeV synchrocyclotron
Fermilab: Inspiration and Determination
In just a few years (1968 to 1972) Bob Wilson directed
the construction of the “National Accelerator Lab” (now
known as Fermilab) to accelerate protons to 400 GeV.
Robert R. Wilson
Rutgers participated in
Fermilabs first experiment:
-Tom Devlin
-Felix Sannes
-Richard Plano
Fermilab ~ 1972
Inspiration: Colliders
P. Panofsky (SLAC)
For a low energy proton, hitting
stationary proton, the available
E
collision energy is:
Ecol 
2
As the remainder go towards the
KE of the system after collision.
Relativity complicates issues
even more, when E >> M then
the available collision energy is:
Ecol 
2Mc 2 E 
E
2
Collider Benefit:
Two particles of equal mass
traveling head on, after
collision, has a total combined
KE of zero, thus the entire
energy of both particles is
available as collision energy.
The challenge:
Luminosity….
G. I. Budker (Novosibirsk)
I am omitting a deep history
-Princeton/Stanford double ring
-VEP I, II, III, IV (Novosibirsk)
-SPEAR (SLAC) & DORIS (DESY)
- ISR C. Rubbia & Van de meer
-SPbarPS (CERN)
-SLC(SLAC) & LEP (CERN)
Always a friendly competition !
Fermilab: Inspiration and Determination
In the 1980’s Rich Orr, Helen Edwards, Richard Lundy, Alvin Tollestrup directed the
Tevatron effort: a supplement to the 400 GeV synchrotron with a superconducting
synchrotron to reach 1 TeV.
RU is a CDF collaborator
Present day Fermilab site
Main Injector
anti-proton ring
anti-proton source
Installation of the Tevatron below the
existing Main Ring accelerator
The Tevatron has been at the energy
frontier for over 25 years !
The LHC at CERN: 7 TeV (14 TeVcol)
- US participation
- 27 km circumference (old LEP tunnel)
- ~ 100m below surface
- crosses Swiss/French border
- First beam expected in 2009
- 360 MJ stored energy in the beam
-
SPS: sister to Fermilab’s main ring
RU is a CMS collaborator
Best Light Sources Around:
Accelerators serve many disciplines
(e.g. condensed matter, Biology, Astrophysics)
•
•
•
•
1st Generation: “parasitic” synchrotron light
2nd Gen: dedicated low emittance synchrotrons: NSLS at BNL
3rd Gen: 2nd Gen with Insertion devices
4th Gen: FEL’s, XFEL: very short time structure for high times
resolution
Challenges of the present:
• Push for higher energy
– Cost reduction
• RF superconductivity
• Superconducting magnets
• Energy recovery
– Size constraint
• Higher accelerating gradients
• Stronger magnets
– Material limitation
• High Tc Superconducting materials
– Intensity
Interesting programs
- Plasma Wakefield acceleration
- Laser induced acceleration
- Dielectric acceleration
- Energy recovery
- Muon colliders
- Int’l Linear collider
- FEL/ERL (light sources)
- etc…
The A0 Photoinjector at Fermilab is an example of an Advanced Accelerator R&D facility.
Students, I ask: What’s Next ?
• Accelerator physics has been a history of innovation followed
determination. We find ourselves as were in 1927, as we now
need a source of inspiration to develop higher gradients in
order to make the next generation of accelerators feasible.
In 80 years from now, will we be able to quote from 2008:
“What we require is an apparatus to give us a potential of the
order of 10 million million million volts which can be safely
accommodated in a reasonably sized building and operated by
a few megawatts of power… I see no reason why such a
requirement cannot be made practical.”