What creates the magnetic field on a cyclotron?

In summary, the magnetic field on a cyclotron is created by powerful electromagnets, although the specific construction can vary. This field is used to accelerate charged particles, which are focused and prevented from falling towards the Earth by other magnets. The particles gain energy as they cross the gap between the electromagnets, causing them to follow a circular path and increase in mass. However, the exact method of particle acceleration in cyclotrons is still being studied and understood.
  • #1
tot
43
0
what creates the magnetic field on a cyclotron?
in all of the schematics I am looking at it just says "magnetic field points up"
like it is extremely apparent as to what creates the magnetic field.
I was thinking that a bunch of small diameter solenoids packed side by side would be the best way to create a magnetic field like this.
is this how it is done? do the wires get hot? do they need cooling?
also the magnetic field would be resisted if the chamber for the particles was completely enclosed by metal and the solenoids were external?

what keeps the particles from falling toward the earth?
Cyclotron_with_glowing_beam.jpg
it is just hard to see what is going on. Even the physics textbooks on particle accelerators just have crappy little black and white drawings.
I just want to see where everything is. there must be a 3D model of these accelerators out there somewhere!
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2


Electromagnets, probably. You'd have to look at the construction schematics for a particular cyclotron to figure out what produces its magnetic field, since that can vary from one machine to another. It doesn't really matter how the field is produced when you're just analyzing the physics.

For a cyclotron made with a powerful electromagnet, the wires do get hot and they would need cooling, but in some cases just leaving them open to the air is enough. For the really large synchrocyclotrons, like the LHC, Fermilab, etc., the magnetic material itself is cooled using liquid helium (I think), because the magnets work better when they're cold; that same coolant can also be used to support superconducting wires, which don't dissipate heat (they have zero resistance).

Those large synchrocyclotrons also have various sorts of focusing magnets which keep the particles on track and prevent them from falling toward the Earth. In a small cyclotron... maybe nothing; the particles just do whatever they're supposed to do so quickly that they don't have time to fall very far at all. Remember that these are very very fast particles ;-)

P.S. I'm not really an accelerator expert so any of the above could be wrong... I'm sure there are people here who know much more than I do about this stuff.
 
  • #3


wouldn't you have the particles spinning for quite a while?
how are the particles accelerated?
With no change in energy the charged particles in a magnetic field will follow a circular path. In the cyclotron, energy is applied to the particles as they cross the gap between the dees and so they are accelerated (at the typical sub-relativistic speeds used) and will increase in mass as they approach the speed of light
it seems to me that this does not explain what object accelerates these particles as they make laps.

Also, on the accelerators like the LHC. Are quadrupoles the primary method for focusing the beam? I do not understand quadrupoles because it seems that they would only focus in one direction, and unfocus in the other.

If quadropoles are put in a series, and each one is osscilated by 90 degrees will this focus the beam? or just do nothing?
http://www.mediafire.com/file/gvzymozy2zk/magnet1.gif
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #4


The original cyclotrons had whopping big electromagnets with pole faces large enough to accommodate the vacuum chamber that the particles actually traveled in. A Google search for "cyclotron pictures" led me quickly to this page:

http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/cyclotron/cyc_hist_album.shtml

Notice in particular this picture: Lab staff standing on 184-inch cyclotron magnet

how are the particles accelerated?

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/magnetic/cyclot.html

As the particles travel through the gap between the two halves (traditionally called "dees"), the voltage between the halves produces an electric field which accelerates the particles.
 
Last edited:
  • #5


Berkeley (University of California) used to have a cyclotron with pole tips about 184 inches (4.67 meters) in diameter. This was built just after World War II, and used until about 1980, when it was disassembled. It needed about 2 megawatts of power to run the coils. There is a slight vertical focusing that keeps the beam from hitting the vacuum chamber and the "dees" ("D" shaped electrodes) and falling down (gravity). Proton revolution frequencies range from perhaps 10 MHz to over 30 MHz, depending on the magnetic field strength.
Bob S
 
  • #6


Thanks bob. Once I piece together all of this information I hope I can find the time to assemble some 3d Models in Maya for Educational purposes. I will probably start with modeling a linear accelerator though. I was just curious about cyclotrons because my grandfather worked on a Cyclotron at Berkeley, I think it was probably before WWII though. Unless he went back to school and did graduate work after the end of WWII.

I am not sure.
 
  • #7


tot said:
Thanks bob. Once I piece together all of this information I hope I can find the time to assemble some 3d Models in Maya for Educational purposes. I will probably start with modeling a linear accelerator though. I was just curious about cyclotrons because my grandfather worked on a Cyclotron at Berkeley, I think it was probably before WWII though. Unless he went back to school and did graduate work after the end of WWII.

I am not sure.
The first cyclotron at Berkeley (about 6" dia) was built in ~1932. The 60" in 1939. the 184" in about 1946. There was also a betatron. And a Hilac. When I was there ~50 years ago there were still some people from before the War there. (Lawrence, McMillan, Thornton, Cooksley? etc. etc.).
Bob S
 

1. What is a cyclotron?

A cyclotron is a type of particle accelerator that uses high-frequency alternating electric fields and a constant magnetic field to accelerate charged particles to high speeds.

2. How does a cyclotron create a magnetic field?

A cyclotron creates a magnetic field by using a large electromagnet. When an electric current is passed through the electromagnet, it generates a magnetic field that is perpendicular to the plane of the particle's circular motion.

3. What creates the alternating electric fields on a cyclotron?

The alternating electric fields on a cyclotron are created by a high-frequency oscillator, also known as a radio-frequency (RF) source. The RF source produces an oscillating voltage that is applied to the dees (cylindrical electrodes) of the cyclotron.

4. What effect does the magnetic field have on the particles in a cyclotron?

The magnetic field in a cyclotron causes the charged particles to move in a circular path. This path is determined by the strength of the magnetic field and the speed of the particles, which are constantly increasing as they are accelerated by the electric fields.

5. How does the magnetic field affect the speed of the particles in a cyclotron?

The magnetic field has a crucial role in maintaining the constant speed of the particles in a cyclotron. As the particles move in a circular path, they experience a force that is perpendicular to their direction of motion, keeping them on a circular trajectory and allowing them to accelerate continuously.

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
975
Replies
19
Views
991
Replies
1
Views
724
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
17
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
4
Views
9K
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
22
Views
9K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
2
Views
985
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
7
Views
12K
Back
Top