Betatron

First betatron at University of Illinois. Kerst is at right, examining the vacuum chamber between the poles of the 4 ton magnet.
A 6 MeV betatron (1942)

A betatron is a cyclic particle accelerator developed by Donald Kerst at the University of Illinois in 1940 to accelerate electrons,[1][2][3] but the concepts ultimately originate from Rolf Widerøe,[4][5] whose development of an induction accelerator failed due to the lack of transverse focusing.[6] Previous development in Germany also occurred through Max Steenbeck in the 40s.[7]

The betatron is essentially a transformer with a torus-shaped vacuum tube as its secondary coil. An alternating current in the primary coils accelerates electrons in the vacuum around a circular path. The betatron was the first important machine for producing high energy electrons.

Operation principle

In a betatron, the changing magnetic field from the primary coil accelerates electrons injected into the vacuum torus, causing them to circle round the torus in the same manner as current is induced in the secondary coil of a transformer (Faraday's Law).

The stable orbit for the electrons satisfies

\theta_0 = 2 \pi r_0^2 H_0,

where

\theta_0 is the flux within the area enclosed by the electron orbit,
r_0 is the radius of the electron orbit, and
H_0 is the magnetic field at r_0.

In other words, the magnetic field at the orbit must be half the average magnetic field over its circular cross section:

\Leftrightarrow H_0 = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\theta_0}{\pi r_0^2}.

This condition is often called Widerøe's condition.[8]

Etymology

The name "betatron" (a reference to the beta particle, a fast electron) was chosen during a departmental contest. Other proposals were "rheotron", "induction accelerator", "induction electron accelerator",[9] and even "Außerordentlichhochgeschwindigkeitelektronenentwickelndenschwerarbeitsbeigollitron", a suggestion by a German associate, for "Hard working by golly machine for generating extraordinarily high velocity electrons"[10][11] or perhaps "Extraordinarily high velocity electron generator, high energy by golly-tron."[12]

Applications

Betatrons were historically employed in particle physics experiments to provide high energy beams of electronsup to about 300 MeV. If the electron beam is directed at a metal plate, the betatron can be used as a source of energetic x-rays or gamma rays; these x-rays may be used in industrial and medical applications (historically in radiation oncology). A small version of a Betatron was also used to provide electrons converted into hard X-rays by a target to provide prompt initiation of some experimental nuclear weapons by means of photon-induced fission and photon->neutron reactions in the bomb core.[13][14][15]

The Radiation Center, the first private medical center to treat cancer patients with a betatron, was opened by Dr. O. Arthur Stiennon in a suburb of Madison, Wisconsin in the late 1950s.[16]

Limitations

The maximum energy that betatron can impart is limited by the strength of the magnetic field due to the saturation of iron and by practical size of the magnet core. The next generation of accelerators, the synchrotrons, overcame these limitations.

In popular culture

References

  1. Kerst, D. W. (1940). "Acceleration of Electrons by Magnetic Induction". Physical Review 58 (9): 841. Bibcode:1940PhRv...58..841K. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.58.841.
  2. Kerst, D. W. (1941). "The Acceleration of Electrons by Magnetic Induction" (PDF). Physical Review 60: 47–53. Bibcode:1941PhRv...60...47K. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.60.47.
  3. Kerst, D. W.; Serber, R. (Jul 1941). "Electronic Orbits in the Induction Accelerator". Physical Review 60 (1): 53–58. Bibcode:1941PhRv...60...53K. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.60.53.
  4. Wideröe, R. (17 Dec 1928). "Über ein neues Prinzip zur Herstellung hoher Spannungen". Archiv für Elektrotechnik (in German) 21 (4): 387–406. doi:10.1007/BF01656341.
  5. Dahl, F. (2002). From nuclear transmutation to nuclear fission, 1932-1939. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-7503-0865-6.
  6. Hinterberger, Frank (2008). Physik der Teilchenbeschleuniger und Ionenoptik. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-75282-0. ISBN 978-3-540-75281-3.
  7. "Physics and national socialism: an anthology of primary sources", Klaus Hentschel. Birkhäuser, 1996. ISBN 3-7643-5312-0, ISBN 978-3-7643-5312-4. p. 350.
  8. Wille, Klaus (2001). Particle Accelerator Physics: An Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-850549-5.
  9. Science Service (1942). "Shall New Machine Be Named Betatron or Rheotron". The Chemistry Leaflet 15 (7-12).
  10. Celia Elliot. "Physics in the 1940s: The Betatron". Physics Illinois: Time Capsules. Urbana-Champaign, IL: University of Illinois. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
  11. R.A. Kingery; R.D. Berg; E.H. Schillinger (1967). "Electrons in Orbit". Men and Ideas in Engineering: Twelve Histories from Illinois. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press. p. 68. ASIN B002V8WB8I.
  12. "The Biggest Betatron in the World". Life: 131. March 20, 1950.
  13. Big Science: The Growth of Large-Scale Research ISBN 978-0-8047-1879-0
  14. Nuclear Weapons Archive, Tumbler shot series, item George
  15. Nuclear Weapons Archive, Elements of Fission Weapon Design, section 4.1.8.2
  16. Wisconsin alumnus, Volume 58, Number 15 (July 25, 1957)
  17. "Michio Kaku's Betatron".

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Betatrons.