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The Stanford Linear Accelerator is the world's largest and most powerful linear particle accelerator. It uses electricity to accelerate and collide subatomic particles. The device is located in the Stanford Linear Acelerator Center, a scientific research facility operated by Stanford University and overseen by the U.S. Department of Energy.
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- Built in 1962
- Accelerator is two miles long
- Longest linear accelerator in the world
- Composed of about 100,000 precision-made pieces
- Entire device is aligned to within twenty-thousandths of an inchIEEE History Center: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center 1962
- Facility director Neil Calder described it as "the world's straightest object"SFGate: Silicon Valley: It's where brains meet bucks (October 23, 2005)
- Uses microwave radiation to speed up electrons
- Generates an electric field of about 30 billion volts
- Has contributed to three Nobel Prizes in PhysicsIEEE History Center: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center 1962
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Stanford Linear Accelerator on Amazon
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Geological investigation of the Stanford two-mile linear accelerator site,
Amazon.com: Geological investigation of the Stanford two-mile linear accelerator site,: Frank William Atchley: Books
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Beam Instrumentation: Proceedings of the Eighth Workshop: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, CA, 4-7 May 1998 (AIP Conference Proceedings / ... Beams, and Instrumentations) (v. 451) - $155.00
This volume is the eighth of a series of biennial Beam Instrumentation Workshop Proceedings. It addresses design principles and engineering issues of beam diagnostic and control instrumentation for charged-particle accelerators and for beam...
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Pulsers for the Stanford linear electron accelerators (M.L. report)
Amazon.com: Pulsers for the Stanford linear electron accelerators (M.L. report): Paul A Pearson: Books
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Preliminary geological investigation of the Sand Hill and Felt Lake linear accelerator sites, Stanford University;
Amazon.com: Preliminary geological investigation of the Sand Hill and Felt Lake linear accelerator sites, Stanford University;: Frank William Atchley: Books
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Ground-water conditions at the proposed site of the Stanford two-mile linear electron accelerator site, San Mateo County, California
Amazon.com: Ground-water conditions at the proposed site of the Stanford two-mile linear electron accelerator site, San Mateo County, California: Daniel Sokol: Books
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