Pulsed Ion current transmitter with cyclical current aggregation
12213239 ยท 2025-01-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05H7/04
ELECTRICITY
H05H7/04
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A pulsed ion current antenna includes an enclosed racetrack having an interior configured to be placed under vacuum. The enclosed racetrack has an ion injection zone, a beam merging zone, a first beam bending zone, a beam return zone, and a second beam bending zone. An ion source is provided at an end of the ion injection zone. Two parallel magnet plates are provided in each of the first and second beam bending zones, configured to produce a respective magnetic field that bends a path of travel of an ion beam within the enclosed racetrack. A plurality of loop coils are configured to generate magnetic fields to shape travel of ions within the enclosed racetrack such that ions from the ion source that are injected through the ion injection zone are merged in the beam merging zone into an ion beam within the enclosed racetrack.
Claims
1. A pulsed ion current transmitter, comprising: an enclosed racetrack having an interior configured to be placed under vacuum, the enclosed racetrack having an ion injection zone, a beam bunch merging zone, a first beam bunch bending zone, a beam bunch return zone, and a second beam bunch bending zone; an ion source provided at an end of the ion injection zone; two parallel magnet plates provided in each of the first and second beam bunch bending zones, configured to produce a respective magnetic field that bends a path of travel of an ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack; a plurality of loop coils configured to generate magnetic fields in one or more of the ion injection zone, the beam bunch merging zone, and the beam bunch return zone, to shape travel of ions within the enclosed racetrack such that ions from the ion source that are injected through the ion injection zone are merged in the beam bunch merging zone into an ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack, which ion beam bunch is redirected by the first beam bunch bending zones into the beam bunch return zone and then redirected by the second beam bunch bending zone back to the beam bunch merging zone; and a modulator connected to the ion source and/or at least some of the loop coils such that a radiating electromagnetic wave produced by the ion beam bunch carries a data signal in a very low frequency (VLF) spectrum of 3 kHz to 30 kHz or a low-frequency (LF) spectrum of 30 kHz to 300 kHz.
2. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1, wherein there are a plurality of the loop coils in each of the ion injection zones, the beam bunch merging zone, and the beam bunch return zone.
3. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1 wherein there are a plurality of loop coils in the ion injection zone, which are tapered in spacing, the spaces between the coils becoming successively narrower away from the ion source.
4. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1 wherein there are a plurality of loop coils in the beam bunch merging zone, configured to shape beam bunch merging geometry so that current from the ion injection zone joins smoothly with the ion beam bunch in the beam bunch merging zone.
5. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1 wherein there are a plurality of loop coils in the beam bunch return zone, which are tapered in spacing, the spaces between the coils becoming successively narrower.
6. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1, wherein further comprising an electromagnet provided in each of the first and second beam bunch bending zones.
7. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1, wherein the two parallel magnet plates provided in each of the first and second beam bunch bending zones are configured to produce a respective magnetic field that bends a path of travel of the ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack 180 degrees.
8. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 1, further comprising at least one cooling water jacket configured to cool at least a portion of the pulsed ion current transmitter.
9. The pulsed ion current transmitter in accordance with claim 8, wherein at least one cooling water jacket is configured to cool the two parallel magnet plates provided in each of the first and second beam bunch bending zones.
10. A method of operating a pulsed ion current transmitter, comprising: producing ions from an ion source; causing the ions produced by the ion source to be injected into an enclosed racetrack under vacuum through an ion injection zone of the enclosed racetrack; causing the ions injected through the ion injection zone to be merged in a beam bunch merging zone of the enclosed racetrack with an ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack, wherein the ions injected through the ion injection zone enter the beam bunch merging zone when the ion beam bunch is present in the merging zone; redirecting the ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack, by a first beam bunch bending zone of the enclosed racetrack, into a beam bunch return zone of the enclosed racetrack; and redirecting the ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack again, by a second beam bunch bending zone of the enclosed racetrack, back to the beam bunch merging zone; and modulating the ion beam bunch within the enclosed racetrack to cause a radiating electromagnetic wave produced by the ion beam bunch to carry a data signal in a very low frequency (VLF) spectrum of 3 kHz to 30 kHz or a low-frequency (LF) spectrum of 30 kHz to 300 KHz.
11. The method in accordance with claim 10, wherein modulation of the ion beam bunch comprises modulating production of the ions from the ion source, thereby increasing speed of the ions within the ion injection zone, so that after a certain amount of time of the ions from the ion injection zone mixing with the ion beam bunch in the merging zone, the speed of ion beam bunch gradually matches with the speed of the ions within the ion injection zone.
12. The method in accordance with claim 10, wherein the modulating of the ion beam bunch comprises modifying voltage applied to a plurality of loop coils within the enclosed racetrack to create an electrostatic field bias between the plurality of loop coils to accelerate or decelerate the ion beam bunch to change frequency of all of the ions in the ion beam bunch very quickly.
13. The method in accordance with claim 12, wherein the plurality of loop coils for which voltage is modified for modulating the ion beam bunch is located within the beam bunch merging zone.
14. The method in accordance with claim 13, wherein the plurality of loop coils for which voltage is modified for modulating the ion beam bunch is also used for assisting in merging the ions from the ion injection zone into the ion beam bunch.
15. The method in accordance with claim 12, wherein the modulating of the ion beam bunch by modifying voltage applied to the plurality of loop coils within the enclosed racetrack is combined with modulating of the ion beam bunch by modulating the producing of the ions from the ion source, thereby increasing speed of the ions within the ion injection zone, so that after a certain amount of time of the ions from the ion injection zone mixing with the ion beam bunch in the merging zone, the speed of ion beam bunch gradually matches with the speed of the ions within the ion injection zone.
16. The method in accordance with claim 10, wherein the ion beam bunch occupies approximately half of a pathway of the ion beam bunch through the enclosed racetrack.
17. The method in accordance with claim 10, comprising precisely initiating and terminating injection of current through the ion injection zone, cyclically, at a frequency at which the ion beam bunch cycles through the enclosed racetrack, such that on each cycle, an initial merging of the ions from the ion injection zone into the merging zone occurs at a leading edge of the ion beam bunch.
18. The method in accordance with claim 10, comprising using a beam bunch focusing technique in the beam bunch merging zone to layer current from the ion injection zone onto the ion beam bunch by layering a thin layer of the current from the ion injection zone onto the ion beam bunch, and by using magnetic loop coils of the merging zone to shape beam bunch merging geometry so that the current from ion injection zone joins smoothly with the ion beam bunch.
19. The method in accordance with claim 10, wherein ion current from the ion injection zone and the ion beam bunch in the merging zone have approximately the same velocity, so as to ensure coherency of the ion beam bunch.
20. The method in accordance with claim 10, comprising using magnetic loop coils of the ion injection zone to cause ion current from the ion injection zone to be injected into the beam bunch merging zone parallel to the ion beam bunch.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) Concerning
(7) In operation of pulsed ion current antenna 20, an ion beam pulse cycles through the antenna, at a frequency of about 20 kilohertz for example. When the leading edge of an ion current pulse arrives at merging zone 24, additional ions are injected through injection zone 22, at a current of about 1 ampere for example, and are layered onto the ion current pulse, not to increase speed as in a racetrack microtron, but, rather, to aggregate current. Thus, instead of charged particles following different return paths on different successive cycles, the current of ions in pulsed ion current antenna 20 increases as the current cycles around the antenna, following the same path each time, the total current becoming very high, such as 1000 amperes, and being limited only by loss or saturation mechanisms due to collisions between ions that tend to cause diffusion that disperses the ion beam, or due to magnetic field irregularities caused, for example, by permanent magnet irregularities, etc.
(8) The ion beam pulse can occupy, for example, half of the pathway around the interior of antenna 20, and can be achieved by precisely initiating and terminating the injection of current through injection zone 22, cyclically, at the frequency at which the ion beam pulse cycles through antenna 20. On each cycle, the initial merging of the current from injection zone 22 into merging zone 24 occurs at the leading edge of the ion beam pulse, and then as the half-cycle ion beam pulse continues clockwise through antenna 20, current from injection zone 22 continues to be layered on top of the main ion beam pulse in merging zone 24. Once the ion beam pulse has been aggregated to the desired current, the antenna structure functions as a high-power electric dipole antenna.
(9) Injection zone 22, merging zone 24, and beam return zone 26 consist of three respective sets of loop coils 44, 46, and 48 that generate the magnetic field in each respective zone. Linear ion source 50 is provided at the upper end of injection zone 22.
(10) Merging zone 24 is where the layering of current from injection zone 22 onto the main ion beam pulse occurs. The layering can be accomplished, for example, by a beam focusing technique that involves layering the current from injection zone 22, which is tilted at a slight angle of about 1 to 5 degrees relative to the main ion beam pulse, as a thin layer on top of the main ion beam pulse, which is thicker (has a higher beam density). The loop coils 44 in the ion injection zone 22 cause ion current from the ion injection zone to be injected into the beam merging zone 24 parallel to the ion beam pulse. Magnetic loop coils 46 of merging zone 24 shape the beam merging geometry so that the current from injection zone 22 joins smoothly with the main ion beam pulse. If the current from injection zone 22 and the main ion beam pulse have approximately the same velocity, coherency (same velocity for all charged particles) is ensured. Through a diffusion process, the main ion beam pulse becomes more dense as the current from injection zone 22 diffuses into the main ion beam pulse. Although the merging beams are shaped as much as possible by loop coils 46 of merging zone 24, there still must necessarily be a slight angle of the current from injection zone 22 relative to the main ion beam pulse.
(11) Each beam bending zone 28 includes an electromagnet 62 and two parallel magnet plates in the form of bottom permanent magnets 31 and top permanent magnets 30 (illustrated in
(12) After a turn through one of bending zones 28, the cross-section of the main ion beam becomes larger, the ion beam having diffused out into a larger cross-section. Loop coils 48 of beam return zone 26 are tapered in spacing, the spaces between the coils becoming successively narrower to merge the particle beam down into a smaller cross-section. There is a similar tapering of loop coils 46 of injection zone 22.
(13) For antenna 20 to function as an electric dipole antenna, the ion beam pulse must be finite in length and must be modulated by changing beam speed. Through frequency modulation, a change in frequency is used to send information. To change frequency, the speed of the ion beam pulse must change.
(14) In certain embodiments of the invention, two different techniques are used in combination with each other for modulating the speed of the ion beam pulse.
(15) The first technique, source voltage modulation, is to use a modulator 64 (illustrated in
(16) The second technique, which is faster and therefore results in a higher data rate, but which requires more power consumption, is to use modulator 64 to modify the voltage applied to the two loop coils 46 in merging zone 24 to create an electrostatic field bias between the two coils to accelerate or decelerate the main ion beam to change the frequency of all of the ions in the main ion beam bunch very quickly, on the order of tens of microseconds. Thus, loop coils 46 serve two purposes: assisting in the merging of the current from injection zone 22 into the main ion beam bunch, and beam modulation. If only the second modulation technique is used, because of the high power requirement, it is possible to change frequency within only a narrow bandwidth (for example, 50 hertz), which is about a factor of 100 smaller than the bandwidth that can be obtained using the first modulation technique.
(17) The first and second techniques can be combined to modulate beam speed to provide a fast modulation rate antenna with a bandwidth of, for example, 5 to 10 kilohertz (from 15 to 25 kilohertz), which is high enough to enable data transfer at about 100 times typical known technologies such as large metal antennae. For data communication in VLF, there are three important considerations: high output (a sufficiently strong antenna), a sufficiently fast modulation rate, and a sufficiently large bandwidth, the last two considerations being important for ensuring a good data rate in communication. By manipulating the voltage at the source anode of ion source 50 and the voltage applied to loop coils 46 of merging zone 24, it is possible to combine the first and second techniques to thereby combine the advantages of large bandwidth and high modulation rate. Signal processing from two different control mechanisms must be combined to use both the first and second techniques to maximize the data transfer rate. In general, there is also a tradeoff between the size of antenna 20 and the bandwidth.
(18) Furthermore, cooling water jackets 36, which may be in the form of a water-filled tube as illustrated in
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(21) What has been described is a pulsed ion current antenna and methods for use thereof. While a particular form of the invention has been illustrated and described, it will be apparent that various modifications and combinations of the invention detailed in the text and drawings can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The illustrated pulsed ion current antenna is just a representative embodiment. Accordingly, it is not intended that the invention be limited, except as by the appended claims.