microwave linear accelerator
A technician monitors the microwave linear accelerator in the medical facility.
Noun: A microwave linear accelerator is a type of linear accelerator (a device that propels charged subatomic particles in a straight line to high speeds) that uses microwaves (a specific band of radio wave frequencies) to provide the accelerating force to the particles.
This term is a technical compound noun used primarily in the fields of physics, medical technology (e.g., for radiation therapy), and engineering. It names a specific piece of equipment. * The hospital's radiation oncology department uses a microwave linear accelerator for cancer treatments. * The research paper compared the efficiency of a microwave linear accelerator with other particle acceleration designs.
The term is highly specialized. In technical contexts, it is often abbreviated as linac (from linear accelerator), with the microwave power source being implied or specified separately. * The 6 MeV linac is powered by a magnetron. (Here, 'linac' is understood to be a microwave linear accelerator).
- Linear Accelerator (Linac): The broader category of accelerators. A microwave linear accelerator is a subtype.
- Particle Accelerator: An even broader category that includes linear and circular accelerators.
- Magnetron / Klystron: Types of devices that generate the microwaves used in such accelerators.
- Microwave-powered linac
- RF linear accelerator (RF, or Radio Frequency, encompasses microwave frequencies)
This is a fixed technical compound. It does not have phrasal verbs or idioms associated with it. Its meaning is precise and literal, referring to the described physical device.
A technician monitors the microwave linear accelerator in the medical facility.
- linear accelerator that uses microwaves