Nothing unless the atoms form a target.
A PARTICLE accelerator accelerates PARTICLES not atoms.
Cyclotron
they bend and/or focus the beam.
the Large Hadron Collider
Yes, a particle used in a particle accelerator must have a charge to be useful in the device. Particle accelerators we use in high energy physics to investigate things all work by applying a moving or shifting magnetic field to accelerate charged particles. We speed these particles up by repeatedly "hitting" them with a magnetic field. Uncharged particles will not respond to this, and canot be used in the devices.
Yes, it is possible (beam target fusion).
a particle accelerator
A machine that smashes atoms together in order to observe what the universe may have looked like seconds after the "Big Bang" is called a particle accelerator. who ever is asking this is wondering what its CALLED not what it does! btw: Particle accelerator.
The ones that have more mass than the accelerator can move.
The first synthetic element to be made by a particle accelerator was technetium
Passing the terminal velocity is clearly not possible, otherwise it could not be called the terminal velocity!
Particle Physics
Cyclotron
yes it is a particle accelerator ;D
CERN is the largest particle physics research laboratory in the world. People can arrange a visit to CERN. The particle accelerator is included in the itinerary.
No. The more energy the accelerator can give the particle, the closer the particle can approach to the speed of light, but it can never reach exactly that speed.
The Compact Particle Accelerator - 2012 was released on: USA: 8 March 2012 (internet)
Atom Smasher