
A cyclotron is a type of
particle accelerator
A particle accelerator is a machine that uses electromagnetic fields to propel electric charge, charged particles to very high speeds and energies to contain them in well-defined particle beam, beams. Small accelerators are used for fundamental ...
invented by
Ernest Lawrence in 1929–1930 at the
University of California, Berkeley
The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California), is a Public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in Berkeley, California, United States. Founded in 1868 and named after t ...
, 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 particle
In physics, a charged particle is a particle with an electric charge. For example, some elementary particles, like the electron or quarks are charged. Some composite particles like protons are charged particles. An ion, such as a molecule or atom ...
s 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 (sometimes called B-field) is a physical 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 ...
and accelerated by a rapidly varying
electric field
An electric field (sometimes called E-field) is a field (physics), physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles such as electrons. In classical electromagnetism, the electric field of a single charge (or group of charges) descri ...
. 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 accelerators, such as the
Cockcroft–Walton generator and the
Van de Graaff generator. In these accelerators, particles would cross an accelerating
electric field
An electric field (sometimes called E-field) is a field (physics), physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles such as electrons. In classical electromagnetism, the electric field of a single charge (or group of charges) descri ...
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 surpassed by the
synchrotron.
Nonetheless, they are still widely used to produce particle beams for
nuclear medicine and basic research. As of 2020, close to 1,500 cyclotrons were in use worldwide for the production of
radionuclides for nuclear medicine and ultimately, for the production of radiopharmaceuticals. In addition, cyclotrons can be used for
particle therapy, where particle beams are directly applied to patients.
History
Origins
A key limitation of the earliest charged particle accelerators was that increasing the particle energy required extending the length of the acceleration path, which was only feasible and practical up to a certain point. In 1927, while a student at Kiel, German physicist
Max Steenbeck was the first to formulate the concept of the cyclotron, but he was discouraged from pursuing the idea further. In late 1928 and early 1929, Hungarian physicist
Leo Szilárd filed patent applications in Germany for the
linear accelerator
A linear particle accelerator (often shortened to linac) is a type of particle accelerator that accelerates charged subatomic particles or ions to a high speed by subjecting them to a series of oscillating electric potentials along a linear ...
, cyclotron, and
betatron.
In these applications, Szilárd became the first person to discuss the resonance condition for a circular accelerating apparatus. However, neither Steenbeck's ideas nor Szilard's patent applications were ever published and therefore did not contribute to the development of the cyclotron.
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 discipline that builds and organises knowledge in the form of testable hypotheses and predictions about the universe. Modern science is typically divided into twoor threemajor branches: the natural sciences, which stu ...
'' in 1930 (the first published description of the cyclotron concept), after a student of his built a crude model in April of that year. He 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 on January 2, 1931. This machine had a diameter of , and accelerated protons to an energy up to 80
keV.
At the Radiation Laboratory on the campus of the
University of California, Berkeley
The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California), is a Public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in Berkeley, California, United States. Founded in 1868 and named after t ...
(now the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), 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 1934 in the
Soviet Union
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR), commonly known as the Soviet Union, was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 until Dissolution of the Soviet ...
by Mikhail Alekseevich Eremeev, at the
Leningrad Physico-Technical Institute. It was a small design based on a prototype by Lawrence, with a 28 cm diameter capable of achieving 530 keV proton energies. Research quickly refocused around the construction of a larger MeV-level cyclotron, in the physics department of the
V.G. Khlopin Radium Institute in Leningrad, headed by . This instrument was first proposed in 1932 by
George Gamow and and was installed and became operative in March 1937 at 100 cm (39 in) diameter and 3.2 MeV proton energies.
[V. G. Khlopin Radium Institute]
Chronology
. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
The first Asian cyclotron was constructed at the
Riken laboratory in Tokyo, by a team including
Yoshio Nishina, Sukeo Watanabe, Tameichi Yasaki, and Ryokichi Sagane. Yasaki and Sagane had been sent to
Berkeley Radiation Laboratory to work with Lawrence. The device had a 26 in diameter and the first beam was produced on April 2, 1937, at 2.9 MeV deuteron energies.
During World War II
Cyclotrons played a key role in the
Manhattan Project. The published 1940 discovery of
neptunium and the withheld 1941 discovery of
plutonium both used bombardment in the
Berkeley Radiation Laboratory's 60-inch cyclotron.
Furthermore Lawrence invented the
calutron (California University cyclotron), which was industrially developed at the
Y-12 National Security Complex from 1942. This provided the bulk of the
uranium enrichment process, taking
low-enriched uranium (<5% uranium-235) from the
S-50 and
K-25 plants and electromagnetically separating isotopes up to 84.5%
highly enriched uranium (HEU). This was the first production of HEU in history, and was shipped to Los Alamos and used in the
Little Boy bomb
dropped on Hiroshima, and its precursor
Water Boiler and
Dragon
A dragon is a Magic (supernatural), magical legendary creature that appears in the folklore of multiple cultures worldwide. Beliefs about dragons vary considerably through regions, but European dragon, dragons in Western cultures since the Hi ...
test reactors.
In France,
Frédéric Joliot-Curie constructed a large 7 MeV cyclotron at the
Collège de France in Paris, achieving the first beam in March 1939. With the
Nazi occupation of Paris in June 1940 and an incoming contingent of German scientists, Joliot ceased research into uranium fission, and obtained an understanding with his German former colleague
Wolfgang Gentner that no research of military use would be carried out. In 1943 Gentner was recalled for weakness, and a new German contingent attempted to operate the cyclotron. However, it is likely that Joliot, a member of
French Communist Party and in fact president of the
National Front resistance movement, sabotaged the cyclotron to prevent its use to the
Nazi German nuclear program.
In
Nazi Germany
Nazi Germany, officially known as the German Reich and later the Greater German Reich, was the German Reich, German state between 1933 and 1945, when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party controlled the country, transforming it into a Totalit ...
, one cyclotron was built in
Heidelberg
Heidelberg (; ; ) is the List of cities in Baden-Württemberg by population, fifth-largest city in the States of Germany, German state of Baden-Württemberg, and with a population of about 163,000, of which roughly a quarter consists of studen ...
, under the supervision of
Walther Bothe and
Wolfgang Gentner, with support from the
Heereswaffenamt. At the end of 1938, Gentner was sent to
Berkeley Radiation Laboratory and worked most closely with
Emilio Segrè and
Donald Cooksey, returning before the start of the war. Construction was slowed by the war and completed in January 1944, but difficulties in testing made it unusable until the war's end.
In Japan, the large Riken cyclotron was used to bombard uranium processed in their
Clusius tube
gaseous diffusion device. The experiment indicated that no enrichment of the uranium-235 content had occurred.
Following the
occupation of Japan, American forces, fearing continuation of the
Japanese nuclear weapons program, dissembled the Riken laboratory's cyclotron and dumped it in
Tokyo Bay
is a bay located in the southern Kantō region of Japan spanning the coasts of Tokyo, Kanagawa Prefecture, and Chiba Prefecture, on the southern coast of the island of Honshu. Tokyo Bay is connected to the Pacific Ocean by the Uraga Channel. Th ...
. During the disassembly, Yoshio Nishina begged otherwise, saying "This is ten years of my life ... It has nothing to do with bombs." Secretary of War
Robert P. Patterson later admitted the decision was a mistake.
Post-war
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
In physics, the special theory of relativity, or special relativity for short, is a scientific theory of the relationship between Spacetime, space and time. In Albert Einstein's 1905 paper, Annus Mirabilis papers#Special relativity,
"On the Ele ...
. 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,
synchrocyclotrons (which hold the magnetic field constant, but decrease 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 compact and power-efficient
superconducting magnets and the separation of the magnets into discrete sectors, as opposed to a single large magnet.
Principle of operation
A cyclotron is essentially a
linear particle accelerator
A linear particle accelerator (often shortened to linac) is a type of particle accelerator that accelerates charged subatomic particles or ions to a high speed by subjecting them to a series of Oscillation, oscillating electric potentials along ...
wrapped in a circle. A uniform magnetic field perpendicular to the plane of particle motion causes the particles to orbit. During each orbit the particles are accelerated by electric fields.
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: