Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Accelerator Division Annual Report: 1975 (open access)

Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Accelerator Division Annual Report: 1975

The Bevatron/Bevalac is operated, maintained, and continually improved as a national research facility for studies in nuclear science and in biology and medicine. Recent modifications have brought the 21-year-old synchrotron to the threshold of tremendously exciting new studies as the world's most powerful heavy-ion accelerator. In its Bevalac configuration, the machine capitalizes on the coupling of the SuperHILAC to the Bevatron via a 175-meter beam line. The SuperHILAC acts as an injector to provide the Bevatron with high-intensity beams of ions as heavy as argon. At the same time, the SuperHILAC is capable of delivering heavy-ion beams to its own group of experimenters through a computer-linked, time-share system of operation. Research efforts using the Bevalac have included a broad spectrum of nuclear science and cosmic-ray-simulation experiments, as well as intensive studies in biology and medicine aimed principally at diagnostic techniques and preclinical therapy studies for some forms of cancer.
Date: January 27, 1977
Creator: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Accelerator Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Accelerator Division Annual Report: 1977 (open access)

Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Accelerator Division Annual Report: 1977

Accelerator operations of the Bevatron/Bevalac, the SuperHILAC, and the 184-Inch Synchrocyclotron are described. The PEP storage ring is described. The superconducting accelerator (ESCAR) construction is reported, and experiments in heavy ion fusion are described. (GHT)
Date: 1977
Creator: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Accelerator Division.
System: The UNT Digital Library