Cyclotron in a sentence as a noun

We had one of those - a PDP11/23 - it ran our cyclotron.

We're still using a PDP11 with software written in 1981-84 to run parts our cyclotron.

Typically those sorts of tests can be done on Earth if you have access to a cyclotron.

We had an accident with a corn silo and an industrial cyclotron, so there's loads to go around.

I say again, it ran our cyclotron almost continuously for about 30 years.

Each ion travels along it's cyclotron trajectory to circle back to the focus at the right time for the next implosion.

Wild hair: a cyclotron-style router roundabout could hold millions of packets "in suspension" for n seconds.

It really doesn't fit in here as a candidate since one wouldn't expect cyclotron resonance from this model in the insulating regime.

The goal is to have smooth and steady cyclotron trajectories most of the time, but all these trajectories intersect at the same point simultaneously.

They'd done the preliminary calculations based on cyclotron-produced plutonium-239, which was pure enough that a gun design with a long tube was feasible.

I like the idea of putting founders into a cyclotron, accelerating them to near the speed of light, and seeing what kind of energy they release when they collide with other founders.

Or how they got all this in motion before having good bomb designs, and how the Pu240 contamination of reactor brewed vs. cyclotron created plutonium required getting the most difficult bomb design to work ... and it worked the first time!

Cybersecurity researchers have even located command and control systems for nuclear power plants and a particle-accelerating cyclotron by using Shodan.

I assume those "quantum oscillation" measurements were electron cyclotron resonance measurements[1].Also there is an other type of non-conventional insulator which is considered to be well understood: the Mott-insulator[2].

My father studies chemical reactions in supercritical water using a beam of spin-polarized muons from a cyclotron; there's many millions of dollars of equipment involved in his experiments -- yet he still hires undergraduate students, because there's always plenty of grunt work to be done.

Cyclotron definitions

noun

an accelerator that imparts energies of several million electron-volts to rapidly moving particles