Wednesday, 10 Jun 2026
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • DMCA
logo logo
  • World
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Tech & Science
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Celebrities
    • Culture and Arts
    • Environment
    • Health and Wellness
    • Lifestyle
  • 🔥
  • Trump
  • House
  • White
  • ScienceAlert
  • VIDEO
  • man
  • Trumps
  • Season
  • star
  • Years
Font ResizerAa
American FocusAmerican Focus
Search
  • World
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Tech & Science
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Celebrities
    • Culture and Arts
    • Environment
    • Health and Wellness
    • Lifestyle
Follow US
© 2024 americanfocus.online – All Rights Reserved.
American Focus > Blog > Tech and Science > Lasers made muon beams, no massive accelerator needed
Tech and Science

Lasers made muon beams, no massive accelerator needed

Last updated: October 10, 2025 5:33 pm
Share
Lasers made muon beams, no massive accelerator needed
SHARE

Creating muons, the subatomic particles, has become significantly easier.

Multiple research teams have successfully produced muons using compact particle accelerators powered by lasers. Traditionally, generating muon beams required massive facilities. Muons, which can penetrate solid materials much like enhanced X-rays, hold the potential for portable scanning devices that could detect illicit substances like plutonium and uranium within shipping containers.

Rajeev Pattathil from the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Didcot, England, emphasizes, “For penetrating meters of concrete, stone, or metals, muons are unparalleled.”

Scientists have long utilized naturally occurring muons, formed from interactions in Earth’s atmosphere, to peer inside volcanoes, pyramids, and other substantial structures. By measuring muons’ behavior as they traverse an object, they can infer the materials present by noting how much has been scattered or absorbed.

However, natural muons are rare, with only one landing on each square centimeter of Earth’s surface every minute. This scarcity makes imaging a sluggish endeavor, especially in busy shipping ports, where holding a container for hours is impractical. The advent of artificial muon beams may streamline this process.

The cutting-edge method is grounded in miniaturized accelerators that utilize lasers to ionize plasma, creating charged particles. This process engenders a wave of electric charge within the plasma, propelling electrons to high energies. When these speedy electrons collide with dense materials, such as lead, they generate a muon beam.

Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California achieved this by accelerating electrons traversing merely 30 centimeters, as reported by physicist Davide Terzani and colleagues on October 8 in Physical Review Accelerators and Beams. This distance is slightly less than that of a bowling pin, resulting in electrons with energies reaching 10 billion electron volts, which led to the creation of muons with energies in the billions of electron volts. Conventional accelerators would need to span a thousand times that length to yield electrons of similar energy levels.

See also  Warner Music settles copyright lawsuit with Udio, signs deal for AI music platform

“We can convert a kilometer-sized setup into something that fits within a laboratory,” states co-author Jaron Shrock, physicist at the University of Maryland in College Park. Given the ongoing U.S. government shutdown, researchers at Berkeley Lab could not be reached for comments. Muon identification was based on measuring their decay time, which averages 2.2 microseconds.

A diagram shows a laser beam producing a thin beam of electrons, which collide with a large rectangular target to produce a shower of muons.

Muons, although akin to electrons, are heavier. This property allows them to penetrate deep into materials without significant scattering, explains Gianluca Sarri of Queen’s University Belfast in Ireland.

Sarri and his collaborators successfully generated muons at the Extreme Light Infrastructure–Nuclear Physics facility in Măgurele, Romania. Their findings, based on energy deposition measurements in their detector, were documented in a March paper on arXiv.org, still pending peer review. These muons reached energies of around one billion electron volts, according to Sarri.

A similar achievement occurred at the Shanghai Superintense Ultrafast Laser Facility, where muons of comparable energies were produced, as reported in Nature Physics on May 6. This study mainly investigated the production mechanisms of muons at those energy levels rather than focusing on creating a tight beam suitable for imaging, notes Wentao Wang, a physicist at the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics.

The recent strides in laser-driven accelerators have made this progress possible, according to Pattathil. “It is essential to accelerate electrons to near-light speeds to produce a significant number of muons. Only recently have we achieved sufficient quality with very energetic electron beams,” he explains. Although current laser accelerators are not compact enough for portability, advancements in laser technology could eventually make handheld muon sources feasible.

See also  Synthesia snaps up $180M at a $2.1B valuation for its B2B AI video platform

Researchers have initiated some experimental applications. At Colorado State University, a muon detector and lead object were placed within a truck just outside a facility where another muon beam is generated from a laser-powered accelerator. The lead object created a shadow in muons detectable by the muon detector, a proof-of-concept demonstration shared in March during an online workshop titled Laser-Driven GeV Muon Sources at ELI. “This marks an initial step towards practical applications for these laser-generated muon beams,” Shrock adds.

TAGGED:AcceleratorbeamslasersMassiveMuonneeded
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Jessica Simpson’s Daughter Birdie Is Her Twin for School Spirit Week Jessica Simpson’s Daughter Birdie Is Her Twin for School Spirit Week
Next Article Amal Clooney Is the Latest Star to Embrace Showgirl Style Amal Clooney Is the Latest Star to Embrace Showgirl Style
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

Popular Posts

BREAKING: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem Taken to Hospital by Ambulance |

Kristi Noem Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem Rushed to Hospital in D.C. On Tuesday, Homeland…

June 17, 2025

fragment design x Travis Scott Air Jordan 1 Low OG Release Date

The collaboration's success lies not just in the names attached to it, but in the…

September 22, 2025

Watch Journalist Julio Rosas at White House Meeting, Explaining How Democrats and the Media Provide Cover for Antifa (VIDEO) | The Gateway Pundit | by Mike LaChance

“Thank you, Mr. President, for hosting us here. I must emphasize—it may sound repetitive, but…

October 9, 2025

Detroit Duo Stole $12M in Student Aid Amid Biden Administration Oversight Failures | The Gateway Pundit | by Gregory Lyakhov

Federal prosecutors in Michigan have charged two residents of Detroit for their roles in separate…

October 4, 2025

Most Americans blame insurers alongside the killer in UHC CEO death

The recent tragic killing of UnitedHealthcare's CEO, Brian Thompson, has sparked a national conversation about…

December 27, 2024

You Might Also Like

Cybercriminals claim breach of Oracle PeopleSoft servers at 100-plus organizations
Tech and Science

Cybercriminals claim breach of Oracle PeopleSoft servers at 100-plus organizations

June 10, 2026
Best Samsung Galaxy Phone 2026: Top Samsung Mobiles Tested
Tech and Science

Best Samsung Galaxy Phone 2026: Top Samsung Mobiles Tested

June 10, 2026
Hidden Coral World The Size of Vatican City Found Deep Beneath The Ocean : ScienceAlert
Tech and Science

Hidden Coral World The Size of Vatican City Found Deep Beneath The Ocean : ScienceAlert

June 10, 2026
How to watch the World Cup in 4K: UK Streaming Guide
Tech and Science

How to watch the World Cup in 4K: UK Streaming Guide

June 10, 2026
logo logo
Facebook Twitter Youtube

About US


Explore global affairs, political insights, and linguistic origins. Stay informed with our comprehensive coverage of world news, politics, and Lifestyle.

Top Categories
  • Crime
  • Environment
  • Sports
  • Tech and Science
Usefull Links
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • DMCA

© 2024 americanfocus.online –  All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?