MIT Physics Demo -- Jumping Wire
A long length of wire is suspended horizontally between the poles of a magnetron magnet. When a large current from a 12V storage battery is passed through the wire, the wire jumps out of the magnetic field. When the direction of the current is switched, the wire jumps the opposite direction.
The magnetron magnet in this demonstration was originally used in MIT's groundbreaking research developing radar during and after World War II. Microwave emitting cavity magnetrons need strong magnetic fields, which were often created by powerful permanent magnets like the one used in this demo.
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- June 26, 2008 16:47
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A nice demo. Anyone interested should check out rail guns. Slightly different principles, but the effect is dramatic.
I have the priviledge of testing out switching kit at 120kA. The jumping of that kit can be dramatic, especially when the circuit path is broken!
Posted over 3 years by Anonymous