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Re: Farady Cage
Original poster: "Jim Lux by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <jimlux-at-earthlink-dot-net>
chicken wire's not that great a magnetic shield
1) Steel has a fairly high coercivity (it's not magnetically "soft"), and
the odds of the steel being already magnetized (albeit randomly) is pretty
high, given the temperatures and mechanical stresses involved in the
manufacture.
2) It needs to be a continuous sheet (substantially thicker than a skin
depth, by the way) to be a shield. Think of it this way, a field on one
side of the "wall" induces a current in the conductor in the wall. That
current has a field that, effectively, just matches the field inducing the
current. However, if it's just a wire, the field extends all the way
around the wire, so, on the other side, it radiates a field.
(of such calculations are radar cross section and scattering calculations
done..)
It is true that a grid of wires, sufficiently close together, could act as
a shield (by the same mechanism as the "proximity effect" squeezing the
magnetic field out between windings in a coil), but, off hand, I'd suspect
that you need the wires to be quite close together (on the order of the
wire diameter) for this to work.
It's sort of the inverse problem to designing Litz wire.
At 04:59 PM 12/18/2002 -0700, you wrote:
>Original poster: "Harold Weiss by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
><hweiss-at-new.rr-dot-com>
>
>Hi All,
>
>Wouldn't the steel chicken wire serve to knock down the magnetic
>fields? I can understand penetration of a copper wall, due to the copper
>being dimagnetic. That's why the CIA uses both copper and mu metal walls
>to keep bugs out. I would think that the magnetic field would tend to
>follow the steel mesh, and not radiate much beyond it.
>
>David E Weiss