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linear accelerator
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linear accelerator

In physics, a type of particle accelerator in which the particles move along a straight tube. Particles pass through a linear accelerator only once – unlike those in a cyclotron or synchrotron (ring-shaped accelerators), which make many revolutions, gaining energy each time.

The world's longest linac is the Stanford Linear Collider, in which electrons and positrons are accelerated along a straight track 3.2 km/2 mi long and then steered into a head-on collision with other particles. The first linear accelerator was built in 1928 by the Norwegian engineer Ralph Wideröe to investigate the behaviour of heavy ions (large atoms with one or more electrons removed), but devices capable of accelerating smaller particles such as protons and electrons could not be built until after World War II and the development of high-power radio- and microwave-frequency generators.



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The dispute centers on contracts worth as much as $80,000 a year to service the machines known as medical linear accelerators for hospitals and medical centers that own them, said Garry Angelotti, president of Valencia Technical Services in Valencia, one of the defendants.
VLEPP will be a pair of linear accelerators, one for electrons, one for positrons, arranged so that the particles that come out of them will collide with each other.
The company is also building a new plant in Beijing, China, to manufacture linear accelerators and has recently expanded manufacturing capacity in the US for its X-ray products business.
 
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