Image:LawrenceCyclotronMagnet.jpg
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LawrenceCyclotronMagnet.jpg (512 × 383 pixel, file size: 45 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Cyclotron magnet at the Lawrence Hall of Science. The woman in the image is 5' 3" (160 cm) tall.
The large black pole pieces were continued below where the concrete pad now is. These are made of iron and direct the path of the exterior magnetic field from one pole to the other. The white portions contained coiled copper conductor carrying direct current electricity to create a constant magnetic field.
The black structure between the poles was a receiver for the disk-shaped vacuum chamber that contained the D shaped electrodes (called dees).
After the cyclotron became obsolete as a nuclear research device it was converted to use as a research medical accelerator for non-invasive treatment of inoperable brain tumors. The medical tasks perfected using this device are now performed using much lower cost specialized instruments.
Image uploaded by the photographer User:Leonard G.
An operating cyclotron and its target will produce dangerous stray radiation and so the entire device will usually be enclosed behind stacks of high density concrete blocks or heavy metal shielding.
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- (del) (cur) 03:08, 21 March 2004 . . Leonard G. (Talk | contribs) . . 512×383 (46,271 bytes) (Cyclotron Magnet at Lawrence Hall of Science)
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