What Causes Frequency Discrepancies in Particle Accelerator Calculations?

Amith2006
Messages
416
Reaction score
2
I need help. It’s urgent!
# Assume that in the 70 million electron volt (MeV) betatron, the radius of the stable electron orbit is 28 cm. Calculate the frequency of the applied electric field.
I have found the angular velocity of the electron (w) = 1.07 x 10^9
I assumed that the frequency of the electron= frequency of applied electric field
From that I found the frequency(f) of the
w = 2(pi)f
f = 1.7 x 10^8 Hz
But the answer given in my book is 1.7 x 10^6 Hz. Is it a typographic error?

# A linear accelerator for the acceleration of protons to 45.3 MeV is designed so that between any pair of accelerating gaps, the protons spend one complete radio frequency cycle inside a drift tube. The frequency of the radio frequency oscillator is 200 MHz. If the frequency of the accelerating potential is 1.49 x 10^6 volts, what is the total length of the linear accelerator?
I have found the length of the drift tubes individually. By adding the length of all the drift tubes, the length of the linear accelerator can be found out. But that is a time taking process. Is there is better way to find the length of the linear accelerator? I asked my lecturer, he also doesn’t know. Please reply fast because I have my exam tomorrow.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Amith2006 said:
I need help. It’s urgent!
# Assume that in the 70 million electron volt (MeV) betatron, the radius of the stable electron orbit is 28 cm. Calculate the frequency of the applied electric field.
I have found the angular velocity of the electron (w) = 1.07 x 10^9
I assumed that the frequency of the electron= frequency of applied electric field
From that I found the frequency(f) of the
w = 2(pi)f
f = 1.7 x 10^8 Hz
But the answer given in my book is 1.7 x 10^6 Hz. Is it a typographic error?
You have to take into account the relativistic speed here. What did you determine the \gamma to be?

AM
 
Hello everyone, I’m considering a point charge q that oscillates harmonically about the origin along the z-axis, e.g. $$z_{q}(t)= A\sin(wt)$$ In a strongly simplified / quasi-instantaneous approximation I ignore retardation and take the electric field at the position ##r=(x,y,z)## simply to be the “Coulomb field at the charge’s instantaneous position”: $$E(r,t)=\frac{q}{4\pi\varepsilon_{0}}\frac{r-r_{q}(t)}{||r-r_{q}(t)||^{3}}$$ with $$r_{q}(t)=(0,0,z_{q}(t))$$ (I’m aware this isn’t...
Hi, I had an exam and I completely messed up a problem. Especially one part which was necessary for the rest of the problem. Basically, I have a wormhole metric: $$(ds)^2 = -(dt)^2 + (dr)^2 + (r^2 + b^2)( (d\theta)^2 + sin^2 \theta (d\phi)^2 )$$ Where ##b=1## with an orbit only in the equatorial plane. We also know from the question that the orbit must satisfy this relationship: $$\varepsilon = \frac{1}{2} (\frac{dr}{d\tau})^2 + V_{eff}(r)$$ Ultimately, I was tasked to find the initial...

Similar threads

Back
Top