New Accelerator Technique Doubles Particle Energy 124
ZonkerWilliam writes "Plasma wake particle accelerators are making surprisingly quick advances. It was a just a little while ago we had GeV acceleration in 3cm. Now they are capable of doubling the energy of electrons. 'Imagine a car that accelerates from zero to sixty in 250 feet, and then rockets to 120 miles per hour in just one more inch. That's essentially what a collaboration of accelerator physicists has accomplished, using electrons for their race cars and plasma for the afterburners. Because electrons already travel at near light's speed in an accelerator, the physicists actually doubled the energy of the electrons, not their speed.'"
OMG FP (Score:1, Funny)
We're all going to die! (Score:4, Funny)
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Misunderstanding (Score:5, Informative)
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New contribution to the "famous last words" list?
Old Chestnut (Score:3, Informative)
Any black hole created in a lab on earth is going to have negligable sucking power, since the mass in them will be tiny. The vision of a black hole forming and swallowing the earth is great sci-fi, but (happily) poor science. At worst, it will hang around, swallowing the odd electron at very rare intervals.
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Hmmm ... not being a physicist I don't want to strongly refute this, but I'm kinda curious.
Yes, any black hole created by us would initially have negligible mass. But, since it's not created in a vacuum, wouldn't it start accumulating mass fairly quickly? I should think it would start pulling in bits from the atmosphere.
I have no idea about the energies and life cycles of really small bl
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Practically speaking, it would evaporate through Hawking Radiation in no time, however, whenever this comes up, someone points out that we're playing God, and don't really know what will happen (probably fresh from watching some disaster movie).
So assuming that this Hawking
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Hmmm ... I guess. I was thinking that in order to be a black hole, it would have to start out with a larger mass than a grain of salt. I had (probably mist
Don't Knock It! (Score:5, Funny)
Other than a morbid fear of lightning rods and antistatic wrist-straps, it pretty much rocks.
Re:We're all going to die! (Score:5, Funny)
"With the bomb squad, you can usually stop running after the first couple of blocks. If it involves the physics department, keep going."
or perhaps
"We're pleased to announce we are still here to report the results."
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Don't worry, there's always an alternate universe where the experiment fails.
aka "Crossing the Streams" (Score:1)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cue people who pretend they understand the scie (Score:3, Interesting)
Never mind the science, give me my proton pack! (Score:2)
Ahhhh, I love the smell of burning ectoplasm in the morning! It smells like victory.
Re:Cue people who pretend they understand the scie (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Cue people who pretend they understand the scie (Score:5, Insightful)
Cue people who pretend they understand the science...
As mentioned, there are some of us around here who are actual scientists. However, there are no details in the article, thus no science to understand. All I found were crappy analogies with afterburners and some hand-wavey crap about plasma. I'm pretty sure that if it were as easy as running some crap through a plasma to accelerate it, it would have been done some time ago. And there are a number of pertinent questions:
Why do they have to use a 2-mile accelerator if the plasma can do in a foot what it takes the 2 miles to do?
Why can't it be longer?
How is the plasma chamber set up? I'm guessing it's probably an coupled with an RF field, which can accelerate a plasma, but details, come on!
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Only for small values of v (Score:5, Informative)
E=mv^2/2 only for small values of v.
The other formula for E, you might have heard of, is E=mc^2. m = \gamma m_0, where m_0 is the rest mass, \gamma = 1 / sqrt(1 - \beta^2), and beta = v/c. I.e.,
E=m_0 c^2/sqrt(1 - v^2/c^2)
For very small values of v (relative to c), 1/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) \approx = (1/2)v^2/c^2, which leads back to your formula - but the approximation is only valid for v
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Guilty as charged (Score:2)
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Technical equation (Score:2)
You are right. It's been a while since I've delved into relativity (I'm embarrased to admit that my Master's thesis [virginia.edu] involved general relativity). The complete equation for energy, including rest mass and kinetic energy is:
E = sqrt(mc^2 + pc),
or as it's more commonly written:
E^2 = (mc^2)^2 + (pc)^2,
where m is the rest mass. Speaking of general relativity, I should point out that the above equation for energy is assuming a Minkowski (flat) space-time metric.
Thanks for the correction.
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Yeah, I tried using ² and ≅ to no avail. (sigh)
I also forgot to use < to say for v << c, which is why my end looks cut off.
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E=<some weird character line up> = <some more blur>
<assorted english words>
Conclusion: WTF?!1
I'll admit I'm point blank on this.
Another particle in a box (Score:4, Informative)
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A simile depends on having a kind of mapping between one domain and another. These allow you to use reasoning from one domain to reason in another. That's why they're so useful - by using such a mapping, people inexperienced in one domain can still reason in it by leveraging their experience in another. For example, when Shakespeare says "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day" he points out that some of our reasoning about summer's days can be applied to people too. Fo
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Imagine a world where a layman who has a bad map of new territory is better off than if he had no map at all...
OT: Simile - comparisons for the layman (Score:2)
THAT has to be the most lucid and helpful explanation of a simile that I have EVER seen. It had always been explained to me as: a comparison that used "like" or "as". So entirely inadequate compared to your definition and examples. As someone who actually enjoyed studying grammar and who is also a bit of a wordsmith, you've filled in a great gap in my understanding. Thank You!
I took a quick look at Wikipedia's definitio
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E=1/2 m v^2 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:E=1/2 m v^2 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:E=1/2 m v^2 (Score:5, Funny)
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Or relativistic hours? I mean 'miles per hour' for a person travelling at relativistic speeds would be different from 'miles per hour' for a non-relativistic observer wouldn't it, since time dilation would mess with the hours? Or something like that?
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(I think I got t
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International Linear Collider (Score:2, Informative)
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The ILC will not "supplant" the LHC, they are completely different machines, accelerating different kinds of particles, making the suitable for different kinds of studies.
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Notice that the electrons are spun at SLAC for about 2 miles up to 43 GeV, then this technique about doubles the energy to 85 GeV in 33 inches.
However, they still need to show that this can be done again and again; the ILC will be in the range of 500-1000 GeV. I only work with particle physicists (mathe
Luminosity (Score:5, Informative)
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Unless you are just looking to punch great smoking holes in tanks or something?
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innerspace (Score:5, Funny)
Those sound like really small physicists.
Re:innerspace (Score:5, Funny)
And their wives still say they're compensating.
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And their wives still say they're compensating.
So what you're really saying is we should have done physics instead of IT, as they have the women. Bastards.
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At least we know what happened to the Indonesian Hobbits. They didn't die out the evloved into physicists.
Good way to die of acceleration (Score:2)
Say hellow to jello bones.
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Unfortunately, the SSC 54 mile ring would have accelerated protons to 20 TeV and was never completed. I can only imagine with this plasma infusion what might have been and never was. If only...
how energy changes as v -- c (Score:2, Informative)
The lorentz factor is 1/sqrt(1-(v/c)^2); at 0.99c it will multiply the mass (and energy) by a factor of 7; at 0.999c it will multiply everything by a factor of 22.3.
For the Americans here (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously, though, this is a neat trick. (Yes, IAAP)
Obligatory Response (Score:2)
Re:Obligatory Response (Score:5, Funny)
Unless you're irrational, that is.
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\My 1/50th of a $ worth
The example is stupid... (Score:3, Insightful)
So let's try this: (Score:2)
(Obviously they were inspired by the traffic on Interstate 280 on their way to SLAC. B-) )
I actually work on this at USC!!! (Score:5, Informative)
1. The electrons travel down the main linac in carefully spaced "bunches", and get accelerated to around 43 GeV over a course of ~3KM (this is at the main beam at SLAC).
2. A (in the last experiment) 1.2m long Lithium plasma "oven" is at the end of the beam, which the electrons are directed into.
3. The first, or "driving," bunch goes through the plasma, and repels all of the electrons it gets near, leaving an "empty" wake behind it, where only the positively charged ions are.
4. The positive charge behind the driving beam pulls it backwards, causing it to lose energy. At the same time, a "witness" bunch placed strategically within the wakefield gets pulled forward by the positively charged ions. The witness gains energy while the driver loses energy.
5. Voila! One bunch now has twice the energy, and one bunch now has none . .
The main caveat is that you're upward-limited by your entering energy, so you still need a huge Linac to accelerate the bunches to begin with. This will likely get tacked on in the form of a "plasma afterburner" to a normal linac, such as in the setup at SLAC.
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would be as an injector?
Re:I actually work on this at USC!!! (Score:4, Informative)
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Because laser wakefield / plasma wakefield accelerates things so quickly and so suddenly, perha
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Re:I actually work on this at USC!!! (Score:5, Informative)
One thing that isn't obvious is that you can't use two of these devices to double the energy twice. One doubling is all you got. Apparently there's some theorem in plasma physics that a Gaussian distributed pulse (as SLAC is) can only be energy-doubled by any method or methods once. I don't know the details of this, and I might be misrepresenting it, but there you go.
By the way, I think you have a misconception about temperature. It's true that a higher temperature gas has a wider energy spectrum, but the primary piece of information you're interested in is the average velocity. The statistical distribution is a function of only one variable -- you can't "spread out" the distribution to increase the temperature without simply dumping energy into the system. If you somehow separated the particles into low average energy and high average energy, you'd just have two classes of particles with two temperatures, not one cumulatively higher one.
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imagine the world is made of Lego shaped into the form of duplo. Before we had particle accelerators, we might have thought we were made of duplo. By smashing the "faux duplo" together, we realize there's Lego in there(*). if we throw it even harder at each other,
Err, 120mph? (Score:1)
Hmm. Well which is it, are we doubling velocity or engery? I'm no rocket surgeon, but I'm pretty sure these are different things. If it's energy then I think the analogy should have been, "...and then rockets to 85 miles per h
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You KNOW when someone use a car analogy to "explain" a highly technical or abstract concept that it will make no sense. And worse, will start up a whole bunch of threads about cars, driving, etc, etc.
Improved accelerators? (Score:1)
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No, but watching you being bombarded by relativistic subatomic particles would be much funnier than reading your comments.
Slashdotism (Score:1)
Only Old North Koreans need souped up particle accelerators.
In Soviet Russia, particles accelerate YOU!
What did I forget?
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Step 2: ???
Step 3: PROFIT!!!
Not really a Slashdotism, but it is WAY over used here...
Loss of beam focus? (Score:2)
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