Publication | Closed Access
Levitation in Physics
420
Citations
73
References
1989
Year
Superconducting MaterialEngineeringLiquid MatterMagnetic MaterialsMagnetismMechanicsSuperconductivityFree FloatationHigh Tc SuperconductorsNew Oxide SuperconductorsKinematicsSuperconducting DevicesLevitated OptomechanicsLow-temperature SuperconductivityMaterials ScienceHigh-tc SuperconductivityPhysicsNatural SciencesGyroscopeApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsClassical MechanicFlux PinningMagnetic Field
Several physical effects—such as gas jets, intense sound waves, laser light, radio‑frequency fields, charged‑particle.
Several physical effects allow free floatation of solid and even liquid matter. Materials may be levitated by a jet of gas, by intense sound waves, or by beams of laser light. In addition, conductors levitate in strong radio-frequency fields, charged particles in alternating electric fields, and magnets above superconductors or vice versa. Although levitation by means of ferromagnets is unstable, supper-conductors may be suspended both above and below a magnet as a result of flux pinning. Levitation is used for containerless processing and investigation of materials, for frictionless bearings and high-speed ground transportation, for spectroscopy of single atoms and microparticles, and for demonstrating superconductivity in the new oxide superconductors.
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