Publication | Closed Access
Development of a vector-tensor system to measure the absolute magnetic flux density and its gradient in magnetically shielded rooms
12
Citations
22
References
2015
Year
Superconducting MaterialEngineeringLow-dimensional MagnetismPortable Squid SystemTemporal DriftVector-tensor SystemMagnetic MaterialsMagnetic SensorElectromagnetic CompatibilityMagnetismSuperconductivityQuantum MaterialsComputational ElectromagneticsSuperconducting DevicesQuantum SciencePhysicsMagnetic MeasurementGradient TensorMicro-magnetic ModelingNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied PhysicsQuantum DevicesMagnetic PropertyMagnetic Field
Several experiments in fundamental physics demand an environment of very low, homogeneous, and stable magnetic fields. For the magnetic characterization of such environments, we present a portable SQUID system that measures the absolute magnetic flux density vector and the gradient tensor. This vector-tensor system contains 13 integrated low-critical temperature (LTc) superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) inside a small cylindrical liquid helium Dewar with a height of 31 cm and 37 cm in diameter. The achievable resolution depends on the flux density of the field under investigation and its temporal drift. Inside a seven-layer mu-metal shield, an accuracy better than ±23 pT for the components of the static magnetic field vector and ±2 pT/cm for each of the nine components of the gradient tensor is reached by using the shifting method.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1