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ERNEST O. LAWRENCE
During the 1920s, the only available method for probing nuclei was
that developed by Ernest Rutherford, which consisted of bombarding
the nuclei with alpha particles. A major problem with this technique
was overcoming the repulsive forces between the positively charged
alpha particle and the target's positively charged nucleus. The
relatively low energies possessed by alpha particles compounded
the problem. Rutherford's method worked reasonably well with light
elements, whose nuclear charges were small, but failed with elements
of high atomic numbers. To overcome this problem, a number of machines
were developed for accelerating charged particles to higher energies,
but the cyclotron of Ernest Lawrence would prove the most important
tool in high-energy physics. Lawrence conceived the idea for the
cyclotron in 1929 after coming across an article by Rolf Wideröe.
The article described an accelerator that employed a pair of linearly
arranged cylinders and an alternating electric field. Lawrence's
inspiration was to reconfigure Wideröe's cylinders as D-shaped
chambers and position them between the poles of a magnet. Within
the "dees", ions (e.g., protons) were accelerated in a series of
steps over a spiral path. As such, the cyclotron could be small
yet capable of generating very high energy ions. Even Lawrence's
first machine, only 4.5" in diameter, accelerated protons to 80,000
eV. Later, Lawrence used improved versions of the cyclotron to investigate
nuclear processes and to produce a variety of new and medically
important isotopes (e.g., the phosphorus-32 used in early attempts
to treat leukemia). For this work, Lawrence received the 1939 Nobel
Prize in physics. Today, descendants of this first cyclotron continue
to play an important role in the treatment of cancer and have proven
to be the physicist's most useful tool for exploring the nature
of matter.
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