Potential damage to DC superconducting magnets due to the higu frequency electromagnetic waves
Abstract
Experimental data are presented in support of the hypothesis that a dc superconducting magnet coil does not behave strictly as an inductor, but as a complicated electrodynamic device capable of supporting electromagnetic waves. Travel times of nanosecond pulses and evidence of sinusoidal standing waves were observed on a prototype four-layer solenoidal coil at room temperature. Ringing observed during switching transients appears as a sequence of multiple reflected square pulses whose durations are related to the layer lengths. With sinusoidal excitation of the coil, the voltage amplitude between a pair of points on the coil exhibits maxima at those frequencies such that the distance between these points is an odd multiple of half wavelength in free space. Evidence indicates that any disturbance, such as that resulting from switching or sudden fault, initiates multiple reflections between layers, thus raising the possibility for sufficiently high voltages to cause breakdown.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- 1977
- Bibcode:
- 1977STIN...7813330G
- Keywords:
-
- Electromagnetic Radiation;
- High Frequencies;
- Radiation Damage;
- Superconducting Magnets;
- Electric Potential;
- Pulsed Radiation;
- Sine Waves;
- Standing Waves;
- Temperature Effects;
- Thermal Protection;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering