Happy Atheist Forum

General => Science => Topic started by: Recusant on January 09, 2020, 02:57:08 AM

Title: Miniaturised Particle Accelerators
Post by: Recusant on January 09, 2020, 02:57:08 AM
You just know there will soon be somebody working on how to turn this development into a weapon, if they aren't already. Meanwhile small physics departments may start dreaming of having a particle accelerator of their very own.

"Researchers build a particle accelerator that fits on a chip" | ScienceDaily (https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/01/200102143352.htm)

QuoteOn a hillside above Stanford University, the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory operates a scientific instrument nearly 2 miles long. In this giant accelerator, a stream of electrons flows through a vacuum pipe, as bursts of microwave radiation nudge the particles ever-faster forward until their velocity approaches the speed of light, creating a powerful beam that scientists from around the world use to probe the atomic and molecular structures of inorganic and biological materials.

Now, for the first time, scientists at Stanford and SLAC have created a silicon chip that can accelerate electrons -- albeit at a fraction of the velocity of that massive instrument -- using an infrared laser to deliver, in less than a hair's width, the sort of energy boost that takes microwaves many feet.

Writing in the Jan. 3 issue of Science, a team led by electrical engineer Jelena Vuckovic explained how they carved a nanoscale channel out of silicon, sealed it in a vacuum and sent electrons through this cavity while pulses of infrared light -- to which silicon is as transparent as glass is to visible light -- were transmitted by the channel walls to speed the electrons along.

The accelerator-on-a-chip demonstrated in Science is just a prototype, but Vuckovic said its design and fabrication techniques can be scaled up to deliver particle beams accelerated enough to perform cutting-edge experiments in chemistry, materials science and biological discovery that don't require the power of a massive accelerator.

[Continues . . . (https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/01/200102143352.htm)]
Title: Re: Miniaturised Particle Accelerators
Post by: xSilverPhinx on January 09, 2020, 03:00:14 AM
Basic and Applied (technological) sciences working together to enhance each other. :tellmemore: And to possibly build weapons, of course.  :sadcheer:
Title: Re: Miniaturised Particle Accelerators
Post by: Tank on January 22, 2020, 09:55:03 PM
I think it's called a Phasor!