Performance Test of Search Coil Sensors with Different Core Types
A search coil magnetometer (SCM) is a common equipment to observe energy transmission and vibrations in space physics, enabling measurements across a wide frequency range of up to tens of kilohertz. This study proposes the designs of a magnetic core that allows a low-mass sensor and improves its per...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of astronomy and space sciences 2024, 41(3), , pp.139-148 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A search coil magnetometer (SCM) is a common equipment to observe energy
transmission and vibrations in space physics, enabling measurements across a
wide frequency range of up to tens of kilohertz. This study proposes the designs
of a magnetic core that allows a low-mass sensor and improves its performance: a
rod core, sheet-stacked core, and rolling-sheet core. Subsequently, the
performance of each sensor was investigated. The sheet-stacked core using the
cobalt-based alloy exhibited the highest sensitivity, although it exhibited
instability beyond 20 kHz. In contrast, the rod and rolling-sheet core sensors
demonstrated stability in the magnetic field measurements (10 Hz–40 kHz).
Moreover, the noise equivalent magnetic induction (NEMI) of the rod- and
rolling-sheet core sensors were 0.014 pT Hz–1/2 and 0.012 pT
Hz–1/2 at 1 kHz, respectively. The rolling-sheet core with
high relative permeability achieved a mass reduction of over three times that of
the rod core while exhibiting sufficient sensitivity. |
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ISSN: | 2093-5587 2093-1409 |
DOI: | 10.5140/JASS.2024.41.3.139 |