The magnetic flux quantum Φ0 is the quantum of magnetic flux passing through a superconductor. The inverse of the flux quantum, 1/Φ0, is called the Josephson constant, and is denoted KJ. The quantization of magnetic flux is closely related to the Aharonov-Bohm effect, but was predicted earlier by F. London in 1948 using a phenomenological model.
The Josephson constant is the inverse of the quantum of magnetic flux: = 4.835 979 Hz/V. In 1988, the CIPM recommended that this be considered the exact "conventional" value of the constant, denoted KJ-90. The CODATA 2002 value, on the other hand, is KJ = (483 597.879±0.041) Hz/V *.
If the area under consideration consists entirely of superconducting material, the magnetic flux through it will be zero, for supercurrents always flow in such a way as to expel magnetic fields from the interior of a superconductor, a phenomenon known as the Meissner effect. A non-zero magnetic flux may be obtained by embedding a ring of superconducting material in a normal (non-superconducting) medium. There are no supercurrents present at the center of the ring, so magnetic fields can pass through. However, the supercurrents at the boundary will arrange themselves so that the total magnetic flux through the ring is quantized in units of Φ0. This is the idea behind SQUIDs, which are the most accurate type of magnetometer available.
A similar effect occurs when a superconductor is placed in a magnetic field. At sufficiently high field strengths, some of the magnetic field may penetrate the superconductor in the form of thin threads of material that have turned normal. These threads, which are sometimes called fluxons because they carry magnetic flux, are in fact the central regions ("cores") of vortices in the supercurrent. Each fluxon carries an integer number of magnetic flux quanta.
See also: Dirac flux quantum
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