Long-term future particle accelerators
Javier Resta-L\'opez

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development and future prospects of particle accelerators, emphasizing novel, sustainable techniques to overcome current limitations and enable more compact, cost-effective accelerators for diverse scientific and technological applications.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of emerging accelerator technologies aimed at achieving more sustainable and compact accelerators for long-term future research and applications.
Findings
Current accelerators like the LHC are resource-intensive and costly.
Novel acceleration techniques can reduce size and energy consumption.
Alternative methods are essential for sustainable future accelerators.
Abstract
Particle accelerators have enabled forefront research in high energy physics and other research areas for more than half a century. Accelerators have directly contributed to 26 Nobel Prizes in Physics since 1939 as well as another 20 Nobel Prizes in Chemistry, Medicine and Physics with X-rays. Although high energy physics has been the main driving force for the development of the particle accelerators, accelerator facilities have continually been expanding applications in many areas of research and technology. For instance, active areas of accelerator applications include radiotherapy to treat cancer, production of short-lived medical isotopes, synchrotron light sources, free-electron lasers, beam lithography for microcircuits, thin-film technology and radiation processing of food. Currently, the largest and most powerful accelerator is the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle accelerators and beam dynamics · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Particle Detector Development and Performance
