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Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster

View against the direction of the proton beams. The 50 MeV Linac 1 is behind the concrete wall. Its beam emerges from the hole near the centre of the picture. A switching magnet directs the beam either to the PS (to the right in the sense of the beam; original injection line), or lets it go straight...

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Autor principal: CERN PhotoLab
Publicado: 1978
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/969147
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author CERN PhotoLab
author_facet CERN PhotoLab
author_sort CERN PhotoLab
collection CERN
description View against the direction of the proton beams. The 50 MeV Linac 1 is behind the concrete wall. Its beam emerges from the hole near the centre of the picture. A switching magnet directs the beam either to the PS (to the right in the sense of the beam; original injection line), or lets it go straight on to the Booster (originally 800 MeV, now 1.4 GeV). The huge drum in the line to the Booster is a "debuncher", driven by the 200 MHz RF of the linac. It reduces the beam's momentum spread. This was the last year of Linac 1 as provider of protons to the Booster. Linac 2, nearly completed at the time of this picture, took up trial delivery at the end of 1978, and routine delivery in 1979. The beam line from Linac 2, barely visible here, can be clearly seen on 7802260. Linac 1 had a second life as an ion accelerator.
id cern-969147
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 1978
record_format invenio
spelling cern-9691472019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/969147CERN PhotoLabBeam lines from Linac 1 to PS and BoosterAccelerators and associated DevelopmentsView against the direction of the proton beams. The 50 MeV Linac 1 is behind the concrete wall. Its beam emerges from the hole near the centre of the picture. A switching magnet directs the beam either to the PS (to the right in the sense of the beam; original injection line), or lets it go straight on to the Booster (originally 800 MeV, now 1.4 GeV). The huge drum in the line to the Booster is a "debuncher", driven by the 200 MHz RF of the linac. It reduces the beam's momentum spread. This was the last year of Linac 1 as provider of protons to the Booster. Linac 2, nearly completed at the time of this picture, took up trial delivery at the end of 1978, and routine delivery in 1979. The beam line from Linac 2, barely visible here, can be clearly seen on 7802260. Linac 1 had a second life as an ion accelerator.CERN-PHOTO-7802261oai:cds.cern.ch:9691471978
spellingShingle Accelerators and associated Developments
CERN PhotoLab
Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster
title Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster
title_full Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster
title_fullStr Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster
title_full_unstemmed Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster
title_short Beam lines from Linac 1 to PS and Booster
title_sort beam lines from linac 1 to ps and booster
topic Accelerators and associated Developments
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/969147
work_keys_str_mv AT cernphotolab beamlinesfromlinac1topsandbooster