Cutting Edge Medicine, Smashing Tumours with Particle Accelerators
Next month’s Medical Accelerator conference sees the people behind some of the most complex machines in a hospital meet up to discuss the present and future of this cutting-edge cancer treatment. What have the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and a radiotherapy machine got in common? They are both particle accelerators. While the LHC looks for the secrets of the universe, matter and reality, a radiotherapy machine, actually called a ‘linac’ (Linear Accelerator), is used to treat cancer in patients. It does this by aiming X-rays or a beam of particles such as protons or electrons at a cancerous tumour growing within the body. Normally, when we think of cancer, we think of patients and the medical profession. It’s easy to forget there are physicists who apply complex theory to medicine. After…