Accelerator Division

Accelerator Division Home Page Photo Captions

The Fermilab site, focussing on the Main Injector (foreground), the antiproton source, the Booster, Wilson Hall and the Fixed Target area. MiniBooNE Phototube Assembly MI Beamline This image, together with the previous image, make a nice view of the complex, with the Main Injector prominent in the foregroud. (These two images share 30 pixels of image: Note service building at the bottom appears in both images)
This is the 201 MHz power tube, called the 7835, from the first half of the Fermilab Linac. 7835 Power Tube An ILC Cavity Making final adjustments to an ILC prototype cavity just before doing a cold test..
This is a Tevatron superconducting magnet in its final stages of testing at the magnet test facility. Tevatron Magnet Linac RF end plate Discussing the barrier RF system for the Main Injector; Dave Wildman, Hai Zheng and Akira Takagi.
Installing and inspecting magnet shims in the Tevatron. Pelletron & Jerry Bonnie at NuMI The Beam Profile Monitor for the Electron Cooling project.
A prototype 3-cell superconducting cavity for the proposed 8-GeV Linac Super Conducting Cavity Pelletron Assembly The Pelletron for the Recycler's Electron Cooling project being assembled at its final resting place next to the Main Injector tunnel.`
Foreground: The Antiproton Source; Middle: The Booster; Prominent, of course, Wilson Hall. Aereal Wilson The Main Injector Inspecting a beam line in the Main Injector Tunnel
Jim Volk inspects a Lambertson magnet at CZero in the Tevatron. MI & TeV MI & TeV The modulator for the Tevatron's Electron Lens.
This is a mock setup of a standing patient at the Neutron Treatment Facility, which operates with some of the Linac beam. MI & TeV MI & TeV A technician works at the RF racks for the Tevatron.
Maurice Ball makes some notes as he inspects a pump room in the Main Injector. MI & TeV MI & TeV The High Energy Linac (HEL), looking upstream.
Adjusting the Separator Polarity Switch for Tevatron - Jim Walton and Jeff Wittenkeller. MI & TeV Mike Martens contemplates a problem within the Tevatron
Wilson Hall at dusk with the Helium storage conatiners at CDF The upstream end of the NuMI parabolic horn. This is horn #1. The horn is used to focus all the particles coming off of the NuMI target so that (most of) the neutrinos that are ultimately produced end up pointing in the right direction (towards the MINOS experiment in the Sudan Mine in Minnesota).
John Reid checks an RF signal Tuning the Main Injector in the Main Control Room
The inside of the Pelletron, used for Electron Cooling in the Recycler Kermit Carlson checks the operation of the electron belts of the Peletron
Therapist Christine Andorf checks the alignement of an NTF patient The Main Control Room


Last update: June 14, 2006

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