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The Meissner effect (or Meissner-Ochsenfeld effect) is the effect by which a weak magnetic field decays rapidly to zero in the interior of a superconductor. The distance to which the field is active is known as the london penetration depth. This active exclusion of magnetic fields is distinct from perfect diamagnetism. It is seen that the magnetic field will be zero inside the material in the superconducting state regardless of what it was before the material became superconducting. It was discovered by Walther Meißner and Robert Ochsenfeld in 1933. The Meissner effect is one of the defining features of superconductivity, and its discovery served to establish that the onset of superconductivity is a phase transition.

Theory


A theoretical explanation of the meissner effect can be obtained from the London equation and one of Maxwell's equations.

\nabla \times J_{d}= \frac{-\vec{B}}{\mu_0 \lambda^2}

is the London equation, where J_d is the current density, B is the magnetic field and \lambda is the penetration depth.

\nabla \times \vec{B} = \mu_0 J_d

is one of Maxwell's equations. Since the magnetic field is solenoidal, we have the relation

\nabla \times \nabla \times \vec{B} = - \nabla^2\vec{B}

Using the above relations, it is shown that

\nabla^2B = \frac{B}{\lambda^2}

Since the Laplacian of B is zero, it follows that the field inside a superconductor, beyond the penetration depth decays to zero.

This effect will levitate a magnet as long as the magnetic field does not exceed the critical magnetic field. A magnet that is suspended by the superconductor has two interesting properties; it does not move, and it can spin without friction. The ability for the magnet to stay perfectly still is due to flux pinning, in which the magnetic field lines become trapped within the superconductor at sites of impurity in the crystal structure.

See also


External links


Superconductivity | Magnetism

Meißner-Ochsenfeld-Effekt | Efecto Meissner | Effet Meissner | 마이스너 효과 | Effetto Meissner | אפקט מייסנר | Meissner-effect | マイスナー効果 | Efekt Meissnera | Meissnereffekten | Hiệu ứng Meissner

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Meissner effect".

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