![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: cannot, compression, due, people, radiation, read, synchrotron |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Some people cannot read properly. Below here the radiation is due to a change in direction caused by RE- COMPRESSING exploding electron bunches. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchrotron_radiation QUOTE: " The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb- exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." **************************************** This radiation would still occur even if the synchrotron was a perfeclty straight pipeline (In no way does this relate with the bend of the synchrotron ring). |
| Ads |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jun 12, 12:38 am, " wrote:
Some people cannot read properly. Below here the radiation is due to a change in direction caused by RE- COMPRESSING exploding electron bunches. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchrotron_radiation QUOTE: " The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb- exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." **************************************** This radiation would still occur even if the synchrotron was a perfeclty straight pipeline (In no way does this relate with the bend of the synchrotron ring). "Synchrotron radiation is the name given to the radiation which occurs when charged particles are accelerated in a curved path or orbit. Classically, any charged particle which moves in a curved path or is accelerated in a straight-line path will emit electromagnetic radiation." (http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/particles/ synchrotron.html) "When charged particles, in particular electrons or positrons, are forced to move in a circular orbit, photons are emitted." (http://www.ansto.com.au/natfac/asrp4.html) "Synchrotron radiation is emitted by electrons orbiting in a storage ring." (http://uw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/synrad.html) "Radiation is caused by transverse acceleration due to magnetic forces in bending magnets (forming the circular path)..." (www-ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/primer.pdf) - Randy |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jun 11, 8:38 pm, " wrote:
Some people cannot read properly. [...] Case in point. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jun 11, 11:38 pm, " wrote:
Some people cannot read properly. Below here the radiation is due to a change in direction caused by RE- COMPRESSING exploding electron bunches. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchrotron_radiation QUOTE: " The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb- exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." **************************************** This radiation would still occur even if the synchrotron was a perfeclty straight pipeline (In no way does this relate with the bend of the synchrotron ring). Reading a description of ONE WAY to generate synchrotron radiation is not extrapolable to a statement that this is THE WAY to generate synchrotron radiation. This is the problem with reading snippets on the Web. You do not get the big picture. PD |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jun 12, 12:38 am, " wrote:
Some people cannot read properly. Below here the radiation is due to a change in direction caused by RE- COMPRESSING exploding electron bunches. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchrotron_radiation QUOTE: " The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb- exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." The entire quote: "The electrons are forced to travel in a closed loop by strong magnetic fields. The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb-exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." You think "the change of direction" refers only to the second change, the refocusing. At best this paragraph is ambiguous since the closed loop is also a change of direction. There are two sentence describing a change in direction. There is no reason to assume "the change in direction" applies only to the second sentence. But in fact it is the first which is the dominant effect, as it involves a much larger acceleration. The first (moving in a circle) is like driving at high speed around a closed track. The second (correction to orbit) is like changing lanes as you drive the track. There may be synchrotrons which deliberately introduce larger changes in orbit (some of the references I found mention "wiggler magnets"). But the synchrotron effect was discovered for simple orbits and is found in every case where particles travel in a circle, with or without focusing/defocusing. - Randy |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Jun 12, 9:19 am, Randy Poe wrote:
On Jun 12, 12:38 am, " wrote: Some people cannot read properly. Below here the radiation is due to a change in direction caused by RE- COMPRESSING exploding electron bunches. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchrotron_radiation QUOTE: " The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb- exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." The entire quote: "The electrons are forced to travel in a closed loop by strong magnetic fields. The magnets also need to repeatedly recompress the Coulomb-exploding space charge electron bunches. The change of direction is a form of acceleration and thus the electrons emit radiation at GeV frequencies." You think "the change of direction" refers only to the second change, the refocusing. At best this paragraph is ambiguous I put in balance this "possible" ambiguity versus the force needed to perfectly perpendicularly deflect an object from it's linear trajectory as compared to the force needed to compress together from BOTH direction these same moving projectiles? That and the part somewhere else where (who can document and reference everything they once read) it said it's not that hard (energy wise) to achieve an electron to travel at near light speed as it is hard to increase the density (compression) and mass of the "electron bunches" for the collision to occur between electron and positron. since the closed loop is also a change of direction. There are two sentence describing a change in direction. There is no reason to assume "the change in direction" applies only to the second sentence. But in fact it is the first which is the dominant effect, as it involves a much larger acceleration. The first (moving in a circle) is like driving at high speed around a closed track. The second (correction to orbit) is like changing lanes as you drive the track. There may be synchrotrons which deliberately introduce larger changes in orbit (some of the references I found mention "wiggler magnets"). But the synchrotron effect was discovered for simple orbits and is found in every case where particles travel in a circle, with or without focusing/defocusing. - Randy |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Synchrotron Radiation | guskz@hotmail.com | The Theory of Relativity | 24 | June 13th 07 01:04 PM |
| Synchrotron radiation & electric field | Syd | Physics - General Discussion | 3 | April 27th 05 09:34 AM |
| Synchrotron Radiation - Electrons, Protons & Positrons | rich | Physics - General (alternative forum) | 1 | January 16th 05 04:54 PM |
| Question about Synchrotron Radiation | Chris Carlen | Physics - General Discussion | 2 | September 10th 03 09:29 AM |
| Cherenkov radiation inside an atom Synchrotron Radiation intrinsic | Archimedes Plutonium | Physics - General Discussion | 8 | July 28th 03 08:16 AM |