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SNS Partnerships:

Los Alamos National Laboratory

The Linac

 
Fish-eye view linac photo
The superconducting linac.
 

The SNS 1,000-foot linear accelerator, shown from either end in this trick photo, is actually nearly perfectly straight, with an allowance of 7 millimeters to compensate for the Earth's curvature. In 2 microseconds, a proton is accelerated down the linac from a stop to nearly the speed of light.

Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was responsible for the linear accelerator, or linac, which accelerates the negatively charged hydrogen ion (H-) beam from 2.5 to 1000 million electron volts (MeV, or 1 GeV). The linac is a superposition of normal conducting and superconducting radio-frequency cavities that accelerate the beam and a magnetic lattice that provides focusing and steering.

Three different types of accelerators are used at SNS. The first two, the drift-tube linac and the coupled-cavity linac, are made of copper, operate at room temperature, and accelerate the beam to about 200 MeV. The remainder of the acceleration is accomplished by superconducting niobium cavities, which are the responsibility of Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab). These cavities are cooled with liquid helium to an operating temperature of 2 K. Diagnostic elements provide information about the beam current, shape, and timing, as well as other information necessary to ensure that the beam is suitable for injection into the accumulator ring and to allow the high-power beam to be controlled safely.

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