
A cyclotron is a type of
particle accelerator invented by
Ernest O. Lawrence in 1929–1930 at the
University of California, Berkeley,
and patented in 1932.
[ Lawrence, Ernest O. ''Method and apparatus for the acceleration of ions'', filed: January 26, 1932, granted: February 20, 1934] A cyclotron accelerates
charged particles outwards from the center of a flat cylindrical vacuum chamber along a spiral path.
The particles are held to a spiral trajectory by a static
magnetic field
A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges, electric currents, and magnetic materials. A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular to its own velocity and to ...
and accelerated by a rapidly varying
electric field
An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
. Lawrence was awarded the 1939
Nobel Prize in Physics for this invention.
The cyclotron was the first "cyclical" accelerator.
The primary accelerators before the development of the cyclotron were
electrostatic accelerator
An electrostatic particle accelerator is a particle accelerator in which charged particles are accelerated to a high energy by a static high voltage potential. This contrasts with the other major category of particle accelerator, Particle acceler ...
s, such as the
Cockcroft–Walton accelerator and
Van de Graaff generator. In these accelerators, particles would cross an accelerating
electric field
An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
only once. Thus, the energy gained by the particles was limited by the maximum
electrical potential that could be achieved across the accelerating region. This potential was in turn limited by
electrostatic breakdown to a few million volts. In a cyclotron, by contrast, the particles encounter the accelerating region many times by following a spiral path, so the output energy can be many times the energy gained in a single accelerating step.
Cyclotrons were the most powerful particle accelerator technology until the 1950s, when they were superseded by the
synchrotron
A synchrotron is a particular type of cyclic particle accelerator, descended from the cyclotron, in which the accelerating particle beam travels around a fixed closed-loop path. The magnetic field which bends the particle beam into its closed p ...
.
Despite no longer being the highest-energy accelerator, they are still widely used to produce particle beams for basic research and
nuclear medicine. Close to 1500 cyclotrons are used in nuclear medicine worldwide for the production of medical
radionuclide
A radionuclide (radioactive nuclide, radioisotope or radioactive isotope) is a nuclide that has excess nuclear energy, making it unstable. This excess energy can be used in one of three ways: emitted from the nucleus as gamma radiation; transfer ...
s. In addition, cyclotrons can be used for
particle therapy
Particle therapy is a form of external beam radiotherapy using beams of energetic neutrons, protons, or other heavier positive ions for cancer treatment. The most common type of particle therapy as of August 2021 is proton therapy.
In contrast ...
, where particle beams are directly applied to patients.
History

In late 1928 and early 1929 Hungarian physicist
Leo Szilárd filed patent applications in Germany (later abandoned) for the
linear accelerator, cyclotron, and
betatron.
In these applications, Szilárd became the first person to discuss the resonance condition (what is now called the cyclotron frequency) for a circular accelerating apparatus. Several months later, in the early summer of 1929, Ernest Lawrence independently conceived the cyclotron concept after reading a paper by
Rolf Widerøe describing a drift tube accelerator. He published a paper in ''
Science
Science is a systematic endeavor that Scientific method, builds and organizes knowledge in the form of Testability, testable explanations and predictions about the universe.
Science may be as old as the human species, and some of the earli ...
'' in 1930,
and patented the device in 1932.
To construct the first such device, Lawrence used large electromagnets recycled from obsolete
arc converters provided by the
Federal Telegraph Company.
He was assisted by a graduate student,
M. Stanley Livingston Their first working cyclotron became operational in January 1931. This machine had a radius of , and accelerated protons to an energy up to 80
keV.
At the Radiation Laboratory on the campus of the
University of California, Berkeley (now the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), commonly referred to as the Berkeley Lab, is a United States Department of Energy National Labs, United States national laboratory that is owned by, and conducts scientific research on behalf of, t ...
), Lawrence and his collaborators went on to construct a series of cyclotrons which were the most powerful accelerators in the world at the time; a 4.8 MeV machine (1932), a 8 MeV machine (1937), and a 16 MeV machine (1939). Lawrence received the 1939
Nobel Prize in Physics for the invention and development of the cyclotron and for results obtained with it.
The first European cyclotron was constructed in the
Soviet Union
The Soviet Union,. officially the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR),. was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. A flagship communist state, ...
in the physics department of the
V.G. Khlopin Radium Institute
The V. G. Khlopin Radium Institute, also known as the First Radium Institute, is a research and production institution located in Saint Petersburg specializing in the fields of nuclear physics, radio- and geochemistry, and on ecological topics, ...
in
Leningrad, headed by . This Leningrad instrument was first proposed in 1932 by
George Gamow and and was installed and became operative by 1937.
Two cyclotrons were built in
Nazi Germany. The first was constructed in 1937, in
Otto Hahn's laboratory at the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, and was also used by
Rudolf Fleischmann. It was the first cyclotron with a
Greinacher multiplier to increase the voltage to 2.8 MV and 3 mA current. A second cyclotron was built in
Heidelberg under the supervision of
Walther Bothe and
Wolfgang Gentner, with support from the
Heereswaffenamt, and became operative in 1943.
By the late 1930s it had become clear that there was a practical limit on the beam energy that could be achieved with the traditional cyclotron design, due to the effects of
special relativity. As particles reach relativistic speeds, their effective mass increases, which causes the resonant frequency for a given magnetic field to change. To address this issue and reach higher beam energies using cyclotrons, two primary approaches were taken,
synchrocyclotron
A synchrocyclotron is a special type of cyclotron, patented by Edwin McMillan in 1952, in which the frequency of the driving RF electric field is varied to compensate for relativistic effects as the particles' velocity begins to approach the spe ...
s (which hold the magnetic field constant, but increase the accelerating frequency) and isochronous cyclotrons (which hold the accelerating frequency constant, but alter the magnetic field).
Lawrence's team built one of the first synchrocyclotrons in 1946. This machine eventually achieved a maximum beam energy of 350 MeV for protons. However, synchrocyclotrons suffer from low beam intensities (< 1 µA), and must be operated in a "pulsed" mode, further decreasing the available total beam. As such, they were quickly overtaken in popularity by isochronous cyclotrons.
The first isochronous cyclotron (other than classified prototypes) was built by F. Heyn and K.T. Khoe in Delft, the Netherlands, in 1956.
Early isochronous cyclotrons were limited to energies of ~50 MeV per nucleon, but as manufacturing and design techniques gradually improved, the construction of "spiral-sector" cyclotrons allowed the acceleration and control of more powerful beams. Later developments included the use of more powerful
superconducting magnets and the separation of the magnets into discrete sectors, as opposed to a single large magnet.
Principle of operation
Cyclotron principle

In a particle accelerator, charged particles are accelerated by applying an electric field across a gap. The force on a particle crossing this gap is given by the
Lorentz force law
Lorentz is a name derived from the Roman surname, Laurentius, which means "from Laurentum". It is the German form of Laurence. Notable people with the name include:
Given name
* Lorentz Aspen (born 1978), Norwegian heavy metal pianist and keyboar ...
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