Zero Gradient Synchrotron

Summary

The Zero Gradient Synchrotron (ZGS), was a weak focusing 12.5 GeV proton accelerator that operated at the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois from 1964 to 1979.

It enabled pioneering experiments in particle physics, in the areas of

  • quark model tests;
  • neutrino physics (observation of neutrino interaction in its 12 ft hydrogen bubble chamber for the first time in 1970);
  • spin physics of hadrons (utilizing a polarized accelerated proton beam in the GeV range for the first time); and
  • Kaon decays.

Other noteworthy features of the ZGS program were the large number of university-based users and the pioneering development of large superconducting magnets for bubble chambers and beam transport.

The hardware and building of the ZGS were ultimately inherited by a spallation neutron source program, the Intense Pulsed Neutron Source (IPNS).

In media edit

Significant portions of the 1996 chase film Chain Reaction were shot in the Zero Gradient Synchrotron ring room and the former Continuous Wave Deuterium Demonstrator laboratory.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ "Argonne Basks In Attention Of Anniversary, Film". Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  • Symposium on the 30th Anniversary of the ZGS Startup, Malcolm Derrick (ed), ANL-HEP-CP-96-12, 1994.
  • History of the ZGS, J. Day et al. (eds), AIP Conference Proceedings 60, AIP, New York, 1980, ISBN 0883181592 .