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English

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Etymology

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From super- +‎ beam.

Pronunciation

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  • Audio (US):(file)

Noun

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superbeam (plural superbeams)

  1. (rare) A very large or powerful beam (in any sense).
    • 2003, Vitaly Kudryavtsev, Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on the Identification of Dark Matter: York, UK, 2-6 September 2002[1], World Scientific, →ISBN, page 597:
      Superbeams are thus a technological extrapolation of conventional beams, with a proton beam intensity close to the mechanical stability limit of the target at a typical thermal power of 0.7 MW to MW.
    • 2010, Andrea Gaddi, Claude Leroy, Larry Price, Michele Barone, Pier-giorgio Rancoita, Randal C Ruchti, Astroparticle, Particle And Space Physics, Detectors And Medical Physics Applications - Proceedings Of The 11th Conference On Icatpp-11[2], St. Martin's Press, →ISBN, page 422:
      This would be the first example of "superbeam", that is an LBL accelerator experiment that will use v beams of very high intensities, never reached before.
    • 2012, Vernon Barger, Danny Marfatia, Kerry Whisnant, The Physics of Neutrinos[3], Princeton University Press, →ISBN, page 86:
      Alternatively, having detectors at two different on-axis distances from the same superbeam can provide multiple measurements that help to remove parameter degeneracies.