Electrostatic Levitation
Electrostatic Levitation
Electrostatic Levitation
2 Levitation
The rst electrostatic levitator was invented by Dr. WonKyu Rhim at NASAs JPL lab in 1993.[4] A charged
sample of 2 mm in diameter can be levitated in a vacuum chamber between two electrodes positioned vertically with an electrostatic eld in between. The eld is
controlled through a feedback system to keep the levitated sample at a predetermined position. Several copies
of this system have been made in JAXA and NASA, and
the original system has been transferred to California Institute of Technology with an upgraded setup of tetrahedra four beam laser heating system.
Sample of a titanium-zirconium-nickel alloy inside the Electrostatic Levitator vacuum chamber at NASAs Marshall Space
Flight Center.
Due to Earnshaws theorem no static arrangement of classical electrostatic elds can be used to stably levitate a
point charge. There is an equilibrium point where the two
elds cancel, but it is an unstable equilibrium. By using
feedback techniques it is possible to adjust the charges to
achieve a quasi static levitation.
3 See also
Magnetic levitation
Optical levitation
Acoustic levitation
Aerodynamic levitation
Earnshaws theorem
Biefeld-Brown eect
EHD thruster
Ionocraft (Lifter)
1
References
External links
JLN Labs: Levitators
Electrostatic levitator Marshall Space Flight Center
Electrostatic levitation raises dust particles o the
surface of the moon
Hybrid electric/acoustic levitation
Electrostatic levitation and transportation of glass or
silicon plates
Electrostatic levitation of various materials including silicon, cobalt palladium, aluminium and other
compounds
EXTERNAL LINKS
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6.2
Images
File:Electrostatic_Levitation_of_a_Titanium-Zirconium-Nickel_Alloy.jpg Source:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/
commons/7/79/Electrostatic_Levitation_of_a_Titanium-Zirconium-Nickel_Alloy.jpg License:
Public domain Contributors:
nasaimages.org (alternate) Original artist: NASA/MSFC/Emmett Given
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