Abstract
A high-energy linear collider consisting of two beams, a driver beam of electrons and a high-energy beam, in which the intense low-energy driver beam is bunched, is analyzed theoretically. The low-energy beam is made to travel through resonant transfer cavities, in which it radiates microwave energy that is used to accelerate the second beam to very high energies. The low-energy beam is maintained at a constant energy by periodic induction acceleration cavities.
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