Photos of Fermilab - Peter Ginter - June 2004
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A prototype accelerating structure for a linear collider made of copper. This A cable winding machine weaves superconducting niobium-titanium wire into multi-strand cable for the world's most advanced superconducting accelerator magnets. Precisely machined copper disks, components of a room-temperature radiofrequency accelerating structure. This A technician cleans a sealing surface prior to applying a vacuum in order to leak-check a superconducting quadrupole magnet built by Fermilab's Technical Division for the Large Hadron Collider at CERN.
Copper cavity Cable winding machine Copper disks Magnet preperation I
A technician cleans a sealing surface prior to applying a vacuum in order to leak-check a superconducting quadrupole magnet built by Fermilab's Technical Division for the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. Superconducting quadrupole magnets built at Fermilab's Technical Division. Designed and built at Fermilab, they are destined for the interaction regions of CERN's Large Hadron Collider. Superconducting quadrupole magnets built at Fermilab's Technical Division. Designed and built at Fermilab, they are destined for the interaction regions of CERN's Large Hadron Collider. A silicon strip disk for the DZero experiment's silicon tracker, a precision instrument at the heart of the experiment's giant detector.
Magnet preparation II Magnet production I Magnet production II Silicon technology
A summer student working on the MiniBooNE experiment inspects one of the phototubes that detects light from neutrino interactions. Fermilab's Feynman Computing Center Fermilab physicist Brenna Flaugher checks connections for a silicon vertex detector for the CDF experiment. The Silicon Detector facility at Fermilab, site of the laboratory's frontier R&D for precision silicon technology
MiniBooNE phototubes Feynman Computing Center Silicon detector SiDet facility