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[[File:KEK Cockcroft-Walton Accelerator (1).jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|750 keV [[Cockcroft-Walton accelerator]] initial stage of the [[KEK]] accelerator in Tsukuba, Japan. The high voltage generator is right, the ion source and beam tube is at left]]
An '''electrostatic particle accelerator''' is one of the two main types of [[particle accelerator]]s, in which [[charged particle]]s are accelerated to a high energy by passing through a static [[high voltage]] potential. This contrasts with the other category of particle accelerator, [[Particle accelerator#Oscillating field particle accelerators|oscillating field particle accelerators]], in which the particles are accelerated by passing successively through multiple voltage drops created by oscillating voltages on electrodes. Owing to their simpler design, historically electrostatic types were the first particle accelerators. The two main types are the [[Van de Graaf generator]] invented by [[Robert Van de Graaff]] in 1929, and the [[Cockcroft-Walton accelerator]] invented by [[John Cockcroft]] and [[Ernest Walton]] in 1932. The maximum particle energy produced by electrostatic accelerators is limited by the accelerating voltage on the machine, which is limited by [[electrical breakdown|insulation breakdown]] to a few [[
However these machines have advantages such as lower cost, the ability to produce continuous beams and higher beam currents that make them useful to industry, so they are by far the most widely used particle accelerators. They are used in industrial irradiating applications such as plastic [[shrink wrap]] production, high power [[X-ray machine]]s, [[radiation therapy]] in medicine, [[radioisotope]] production, [[ion implanter]]s in semiconductor production, and sterilization. Many universities worldwide have electrostatic accelerators for research purposes. More powerful accelerators usually incorporate an electrostatic machine as their first stage, to accelerate particles to a high enough velocity to inject into the main accelerator.
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