Description |
1 online resource (338 pages) |
Contents |
The Development of Superconducting Magnets for Use in Particle Accelerators: From the Tevatron to the LHC Alvin Tollestrup and Ezio TodescoDevelopment of Superconducting RF Technology Takaaki Furuya; Cooling Methods for Charged Particle Beams V.V. Parkhomchuk and A.N. Skrinsky; The Supercollider: The Pre-Texas Days -- A Personal Recollection of Its Birth and Berkeley Years Stanley Wojcicki; Accelerators and the Accelerator Community Andrew Sessler and Ernest Malamud; Book Review: Panofsky on Physics, Politics, and Peace: Pief Remembers Gregory Loew |
Summary |
Particle accelerators are a major invention of the 20th century. In the last eight decades, they have evolved enormously and have fundamentally changed the way we live, think and work. Accelerators are the most powerful microscopes for viewing the tiniest inner structure of cells, genes, molecules, atoms and their constituents such as protons, neutrons, electrons, neutrinos and quarks. This opens up a whole new world for materials science, chemistry and molecular biology. Accelerators with megawatt beam power may ultimately solve a critical problem faced by our society, namely, the treatment of |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Betatrons.
|
|
Colliders (Nuclear physics) -- Congresses
|
|
Isotope separation -- Congresses
|
|
Particle accelerators -- Periodicals
|
|
Particle Accelerators
|
|
Betatrons.
|
|
Colliders (Nuclear physics)
|
|
Isotope separation.
|
|
Particle accelerators.
|
Genre/Form |
Conference papers and proceedings.
|
|
Periodicals.
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
ISBN |
9789812835215 |
|
9812835210 |
|