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Keywords = electromagnetic pulse (EMP)

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19 pages, 5211 KiB  
Article
Alterations in the Temporal Variation and Spatial Distribution of Blood–Brain Barrier Permeability Following Electromagnetic Pulse Radiation: A Study Based on Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI
by Kexian Wang, Haoyu Wang, Ji Dong, Li Zhao, Hui Wang, Jing Zhang, Xinping Xu, Binwei Yao, Yunfei Lai and Ruiyun Peng
Brain Sci. 2025, 15(6), 577; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci15060577 - 27 May 2025
Viewed by 446
Abstract
Background: Previous studies have suggested that electromagnetic pulse (EMP) can induce openings in the blood–brain barrier (BBB). However, the temporal variation and spatial distribution of BBB permeability after EMP radiation are difficult to assess using conventional histopathological approaches. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging [...] Read more.
Background: Previous studies have suggested that electromagnetic pulse (EMP) can induce openings in the blood–brain barrier (BBB). However, the temporal variation and spatial distribution of BBB permeability after EMP radiation are difficult to assess using conventional histopathological approaches. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) is a valuable tool for the in vivo evaluation of BBB permeability. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the temporal variation and spatial distribution of BBB permeability after EMP radiation in rats using DCE-MRI. Methods: The dose of EMP was estimated through simulations utilizing a digital rat model comprising 16 distinct brain regions. Then, the changes in BBB permeability of the different rat brain regions at different time points (3 h and 24 h) after EMP radiation were evaluated using quantitative DCE-MRI. Furthermore, the spatial difference in BBB permeability was assessed 3 h after exposure. Finally, the dose–effect relationship between the electric field strength and the BBB permeability was also investigated. Results: The results demonstrated that the changes in the values of volume transfer constant (ΔKtrans) significantly increased in several rat brain regions at 3 h after 400 kV/m EMP radiation. These changes vanished 24 h after exposure. Meanwhile, no significant spatial differences in BBB permeability were observed after EMP radiation. Moreover, Pearson’s correlation analysis showed that there was a significant positive linear relationship between BBB permeability and the electric field strength within an external electric field strength range of 0 to 400 kV/m at 3 h after EMP radiation. Conclusions: EMP radiation can induce a reversible increase in BBB permeability in rats. Moreover, no significant differences in BBB permeability were found across different brain regions. Additionally, the degree of BBB permeability was positively correlated with the regional electric field strength of EMP radiation within an external electric field strength range of 0 to 400 kV/m at 3 h after EMP radiation. These results indicate the promising potential of employing EMP for transient openings in the BBB, which could facilitate clinical pharmacological interventions via drug delivery into the brain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of MRI in Brain Diseases)
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21 pages, 1302 KiB  
Article
Bounding Case Requirements for Power Grid Protection Against High-Altitude Electromagnetic Pulses
by Connor A. Lehman, Rush D. Robinett, Wayne W. Weaver and David G. Wilson
Energies 2025, 18(10), 2614; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18102614 - 19 May 2025
Viewed by 404
Abstract
Securing the power grid is of extreme concern to many nations as power infrastructure has become integral to modern life and society. A high-altitude electromagnetic pulse (HEMP) is generated by a nuclear detonation high in the atmosphere, producing a powerful electromagnetic field that [...] Read more.
Securing the power grid is of extreme concern to many nations as power infrastructure has become integral to modern life and society. A high-altitude electromagnetic pulse (HEMP) is generated by a nuclear detonation high in the atmosphere, producing a powerful electromagnetic field that can damage or destroy electronic devices over a wide area. Protecting against HEMP attacks (insults) requires knowledge of the problem’s bounds before the problem can be appropriately solved. This paper presents a collection of analyses to determine the basic requirements for controller placements on a power grid. Two primary analyses are conducted. The first is an inverted controllability analysis in which the HEMP event is treated as an unbounded control input to the system. Considering the HEMP insult as a controller, we can break down controllability to reduce its influence on the system. The analysis indicates that either all but one neutral path to ground must be protected or that all transmission lines should be secured. However, further exploration of the controllability definition suggests that fewer blocking devices are sufficient for effective HEMP mitigation. The second analysis involves observability to identify the minimum number of sensors needed for full-state feedback. The results show that only one state sensor is required to achieve full-state feedback for the system. These requirements suggest that there is room to optimize controller design and placement to minimize total controller count on a power grid to ensure HEMP mitigation. As an example, the Horton et al. system model with 15 transformers and 15 transmission lines is used to provide a baseline comparison for future optimization studies by running all permutations of neutral and transmission line blocking cases. The minimum number of neutral controllers is 8, which is approximately half of the bounding solution of 14. The minimum number of transmission line controllers is 3, which is one-fifth of the bounding solution of 15 and less than half of the required neutral controllers. Full article
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12 pages, 4907 KiB  
Article
Observation and Analysis of Metallic Interface Bridging and Self-Healing Under Electromagnetic Shocking Treatment
by Qian Sun, Yaxuan Duan, Fanglei Wang, Weibing Jie and Suohui Liang
Metals 2025, 15(4), 422; https://doi.org/10.3390/met15040422 - 9 Apr 2025
Viewed by 369
Abstract
While self-healing of metals and alloys facilitated by electromagnetic pulse (EMP) energy introduced by electropulsing has been widely reported, the in-depth mechanism is still ambiguous. Here, an approximate in-situ observation was designed to explore the effect of EMP energy induced by electropulsing on [...] Read more.
While self-healing of metals and alloys facilitated by electromagnetic pulse (EMP) energy introduced by electropulsing has been widely reported, the in-depth mechanism is still ambiguous. Here, an approximate in-situ observation was designed to explore the effect of EMP energy induced by electropulsing on the alloy interface self-healing. Electromagnetic shocking treatment (EST) utilizing EMP energy was demonstrated to promote metallic interface bridging and self-healing. At local regions, flat surfaces turn into wavy ones, especially, while local interface bridging and self-healing are commonly observed, indicating a nonlinear surface pre-melting. Based on the assumed mass–spring–damping system of the pre-melted interfaces, the mechanisms of local interface bridging and self-healing under the EST are explored. This work provides new understanding about the interface self-healing mechanism by electropulsing, as well as new insights about the effect of pulse energy (such as EMP) on metallic interface complexion. Full article
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20 pages, 8734 KiB  
Article
A Fast Calculation Method of the Time–Domain Coupling Characteristics Between Buildings and Electromagnetic Pulse Based on the Electromagnetic Parameter Equivalence of Reinforced Concrete
by Xin Wang, Qifeng Liu, Tengge A, Wanhu Wang, Han Xiong, Weijun Wu and Wei Lai
Electronics 2025, 14(6), 1168; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14061168 - 17 Mar 2025
Viewed by 486
Abstract
With the development of pulse technology, reinforced concrete buildings are exposed to increasingly complex high-power electromagnetic pulse (EMP) environments, posing risks of functional degradation or destruction of indoor electronic equipment and systems. Therefore, it is imperative to assess the internal fields of buildings [...] Read more.
With the development of pulse technology, reinforced concrete buildings are exposed to increasingly complex high-power electromagnetic pulse (EMP) environments, posing risks of functional degradation or destruction of indoor electronic equipment and systems. Therefore, it is imperative to assess the internal fields of buildings under EMP irradiation. The challenge lies in the multi-scale characteristics of reinforced concrete buildings, where fine grids are required for the accurate modelling of rebar, thereby consuming substantial computing resources. To address this challenge, this paper proposes a fast calculation method of the time–domain coupling characteristics between buildings and EMPs based on the electromagnetic parameter equivalence of reinforced concrete walls. The method first calculates the equivalent electromagnetic parameters from the S-parameters of the walls, which are then fitted into polynomial rational functions. Then, the auxiliary differential equation finite-difference time–domain (ADE-FDTD) method is used to analyze the time–domain coupling characteristics of reinforced concrete walls and buildings under EMP irradiation. The results show that the proposed method significantly enhances computational efficiency while maintaining high accuracy. Specifically, for a large two-story reinforced concrete building, the method achieves a 3.2-fold increase in computational speed and a 4.3-fold reduction in memory usage compared to conventional commercial software (CST Studio Suite 2022). This approach provides an effective solution for simulating the coupling characteristics between large reinforced concrete buildings and external EMPs. Full article
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18 pages, 8849 KiB  
Article
Experimental Study on Electromagnetic Pulse Sensitivity for Power Modules of FPGAs
by Ning Li, Zhigang Peng, Congguang Mao, Feng Qin, Yang Li, Yonghong Li, Pei Li, Weitao Yang, Haojie Bai, Jiayu Liang, Bohui Hong and Chaohui He
Electronics 2025, 14(6), 1167; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14061167 - 16 Mar 2025
Viewed by 511
Abstract
In this paper, the electromagnetic pulse (EMP) sensitivity of power modules of field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) is studied experimentally. Two FPGAs with different manufacturing processes are adopted. The pulse current injection (PCI) is, respectively, conducted on four independent power lines of FPGA test [...] Read more.
In this paper, the electromagnetic pulse (EMP) sensitivity of power modules of field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) is studied experimentally. Two FPGAs with different manufacturing processes are adopted. The pulse current injection (PCI) is, respectively, conducted on four independent power lines of FPGA test boards, and a specialized test program is designed to explore the influences of resource types and frequencies. The experimental results indicate that different power modules have significantly distinct failure characteristics and thresholds. For each power module, high-frequency (HF) signals generally exhibit greater sensitivity than constant signals in most cases, with frequency being a critical influencing factor. In addition, the EMP sensitivity of the VCCAUX can also be affected by resource types and location constraints. All power modules exhibit different sensitivities to PCIs of different polarities, with the negative injection showing more complex failure characteristics. The manufacturing processes of FPGAs have a slight impact on the EMP sensitivity of their power modules, which is only reflected on the VCCINT. In the case of enabled programmable read-only memory (PROM), an FPGA automatic reconfiguration process has been observed during the PCI experiment for the first time. Moreover, high-value capacitors on the power distribution network (PDN) provide effective filtering by reducing the amplitude and slowing down the edge of the pulsed current. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Radiation Effects on Advanced Electronic Devices and Circuits)
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15 pages, 20002 KiB  
Article
Study on the CSES Electric Field VLF Electromagnetic Pulse Sequences Triggered by Volcanic Eruptions
by Siyu Liu, Ying Han, Qingjie Liu, Jianping Huang, Zhong Li and Xuhui Shen
Atmosphere 2025, 16(2), 208; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16020208 - 12 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 866
Abstract
Volcanic eruptions, as a natural phenomenon, can generate electric field disturbances that may interfere with the ionosphere, potentially impacting communication systems and electronic devices. This paper conducts identification and classification analyses of the electromagnetic pulse (EMP) disturbances in the very low frequency (VLF) [...] Read more.
Volcanic eruptions, as a natural phenomenon, can generate electric field disturbances that may interfere with the ionosphere, potentially impacting communication systems and electronic devices. This paper conducts identification and classification analyses of the electromagnetic pulse (EMP) disturbances in the very low frequency (VLF) electric field data observed by the China Seismo-Electromagnetic Satellite (CSES) and finds that volcanic eruption events can trigger EMP sequences. This paper first applies Fourier transform to the VLF electric field waveform data to convert it into 4 s spectrograms. Then, a series of operations such as grayscale conversion, edge feature enhancement, and binarization are performed on the spectrograms. Subsequently, a K-means clustering algorithm is applied to the binarized results to identify EMP events on the spectrograms. Finally, a classification analysis is performed on the identified results, revealing that multiple volcanic eruption events generate EMP sequences. The results of this paper not only provide new insights into the impact of volcanic eruptions on the electromagnetic environment but also have significant implications for enhancing the anti-interference capability of communication systems and optimizing electromagnetic environment monitoring technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Upper Atmosphere)
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14 pages, 5253 KiB  
Article
Research on Monitoring Methods for Electrostatic Discharge Pulses in Spacecraft Dielectric Materials
by Hong Yin, Cunhui Li, Chengxuan Zhao, Xiaogang Qin, Xiaojin Lu, Xuan Wen, Liang Shi, Qing Liu, Jun Wang, Hanwu Jia and Shengsheng Yang
Micromachines 2025, 16(2), 180; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16020180 - 31 Jan 2025
Viewed by 1055
Abstract
Space particle radiation induces charging and discharging phenomena in spacecraft dielectric materials, leading to electrostatic discharge (ESD) and electromagnetic pulses (EMP), which pose significant risks to spacecraft electronic systems by causing interference and potential damage. Accurate and timely monitoring of these phenomena, combined [...] Read more.
Space particle radiation induces charging and discharging phenomena in spacecraft dielectric materials, leading to electrostatic discharge (ESD) and electromagnetic pulses (EMP), which pose significant risks to spacecraft electronic systems by causing interference and potential damage. Accurate and timely monitoring of these phenomena, combined with a comprehensive understanding of their underlying mechanisms, is critical for developing effective protection strategies against satellite charging effects. Addressing in-orbit monitoring requirements, this study proposes the design of a compact sleeve monopole antenna. Through simulations, the relationships between the antenna’s design parameters and its voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) are analyzed alongside its critical performance characteristics, including frequency band, gain, radiation pattern, and matching circuit. The proposed antenna demonstrates operation within a frequency range of (28.73–31.25) MHz (VSWR < 2), with a center frequency of 30 MHz and a relative bandwidth of 8.4%. Performance evaluations and simulation-based experiments reveal that the antenna can measure pulse signals with electric field strengths ranging from (−1000 to −80) V/m and (80 to 1000) V/m, centered at 25.47 MHz. It reliably monitors discharge pulses generated by electron irradiation on spacecraft-grade FR4 (Flame-Retardant 4) dielectric materials, providing technical support for the engineering application of discharge research in space environments. Full article
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13 pages, 3074 KiB  
Article
Correlation of Laser-Accelerated Electron Energy with Electromagnetic Pulse Emission from Thin Metallic Targets
by Aurelian Marcu, Mihai Stafe, Andreea Groza, Mihai Serbanescu, Razvan Ungureanu, Gabriel Cojocaru, Constantin Diplasu, Bogdan Mihalcea, Mihai Ganciu, Constantin Negutu, Georgiana Giubega and Niculae Puscas
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(1), 29; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15010029 - 24 Dec 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 895
Abstract
High-power pulsed lasers are used more and more as tools for particle acceleration. Characterization of the accelerated particles in real-time and monitoring of the electromagnetic pulses (EMPs) during particle acceleration are critical challenges in laser acceleration experiments. Here, we used the CETAL-PW laser [...] Read more.
High-power pulsed lasers are used more and more as tools for particle acceleration. Characterization of the accelerated particles in real-time and monitoring of the electromagnetic pulses (EMPs) during particle acceleration are critical challenges in laser acceleration experiments. Here, we used the CETAL-PW laser facility at NILPRP for particle acceleration from different thin metallic targets, at laser intensities of the order of 3×1021 W/cm2. We investigated the dependence of EMP amplitude (EMPA) and the accelerated electrons’ maximal energy (AEME), on thickness, resistivity, and atomic number of the target. We have found a quasi-linear dependence between EMPA and AEME and propose an analytical model for the GHz EMP emission. The model considers the neutralization current flowing through the target stalk as the main source of the EMP in the GHz domain, the current being produced by the positive charge accumulated on the target after the electron’s acceleration from the rear side of a metallic target. The data presented here support the possibility of using EMP signals to characterize the laser-accelerated particles in a real-time non-invasive way. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances of Laser Technologies and Their Applications)
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14 pages, 3774 KiB  
Article
Locating Strong Electromagnetic Pulses Recorded by a Single Satellite with Cluster Analysis and Worldwide Lightning Location Network Observations
by Zongxiang Li, Baofeng Cao, Wenjuan Zhang, Xiaoqiang Li, Xiong Zhang, Yongli Wei, Xiao Li, Changjiao Duan and Peng Li
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(23), 4442; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16234442 - 27 Nov 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 930
Abstract
The integration of satellite-borne and ground-based global lightning location networks offers a better perspective to study lightning processes and their evolutionary characteristics within thunderstorm clouds, thereby bolstering the predictive capabilities for severe weather phenomena. Currently, the satellite-borne network is in the preliminary testing [...] Read more.
The integration of satellite-borne and ground-based global lightning location networks offers a better perspective to study lightning processes and their evolutionary characteristics within thunderstorm clouds, thereby bolstering the predictive capabilities for severe weather phenomena. Currently, the satellite-borne network is in the preliminary testing phase with a single satellite. The geographic locations of single-satellite detection events primarily rely on synchronous information from coincident ground-based network events; this method is called synchronous locating (SCL). However, variations in detection-frequency bands and system capabilities prevent this method from accurately locating more than a mere 10% of events. To address this limitation, this paper introduces a cluster-analysis-based strategy, utilizing the observations from the Worldwide Lightning Location Network (WWLLN), termed the cluster analysis locating (CAL) method. The CAL method’s performance, influenced by the density-based spatial clustering of applications with noise (DBSCAN), the K-means, and the mean shift algorithms, is examined. Subsequently, an advanced version, mean shift denoised (MSDN)-CAL, is proposed, demonstrating marked improvements in location accuracy and reliability over the other CAL methods. The satellite-borne wideband electromagnetic pulse detector (WEMPD), orbiting at an altitude of approximately 500 km with a 97.5° inclination, captured 1061 strong electromagnetic pulses (EMPs). Among these, trans-ionospheric single pulses (TISPs) and trans-ionospheric pulse pairs (TIPPs) constituted 21.30% and 78.70%, respectively. Using the MSDN-CAL method successfully determines the geographic locations for 81.15% (861 out of 1061) of the events. This success rate represents an approximate eightfold enhancement over the SCL method. The arithmetic mean, geometric mean, and standard deviation of the two-dimensional range deviation of the locating results between the MSDN-CAL method versus the WWLLN-SCL (or the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Lightning Location System (GHMLLS)-SCL) method are 51.06 (176.26) km, 16.17 (92.53) km, and 100.95 (174.79) km, respectively. Furthermore, it has been possible to estimate the occurrence altitudes for 81.92% (684 out of 835) of the TIPP events. The altitude deviations, as determined by comparing them with the GHMLLS-SCL method’s locating results, exhibit an arithmetic mean of 2.08 km, a geometric mean of 1.30 km, and a standard deviation of 2.26 km. The outcomes of this research establish a foundation for deeper investigation into the origins of various event types, their seasonal variations, and their geographical distribution patterns. Moreover, they pave the way for utilizing a single satellite to measure global surface reflectance, thus contributing valuable data for meteorological and atmospheric studies. Full article
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11 pages, 2455 KiB  
Communication
Efficient Fourth-Order PSTD Algorithm with Moving Window for Long-Distance EMP Propagation
by Yongli Wei, Baofeng Cao, Zongxiang Li, Tianchi Zhang, Changjiao Duan, Xiao Li, Xiaoqiang Li and Peng Li
Sensors 2024, 24(19), 6317; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24196317 - 29 Sep 2024
Viewed by 900
Abstract
Satellite-borne electromagnetic pulse (EMP) detection technology plays an important role in military reconnaissance, space environment monitoring, and early warning of natural disasters. However, the complex ionosphere greatly distorts the waveform during propagation and poses a challenge to EMP detection. Therefore, it is necessary [...] Read more.
Satellite-borne electromagnetic pulse (EMP) detection technology plays an important role in military reconnaissance, space environment monitoring, and early warning of natural disasters. However, the complex ionosphere greatly distorts the waveform during propagation and poses a challenge to EMP detection. Therefore, it is necessary to conduct theoretical research on EMP propagation in the ionosphere. Conventional second-order pseudo-spectral time-domain (PSTD-2) algorithm has difficulties in keeping the stability and accuracy of waveforms in calculations over hundreds of kilometers of propagation. To overcome the difficulties, a fourth-order PSTD algorithm incorporating the moving window technique (MWPSTD-4) is proposed. In the numerical examples, the performance of MWPSTD-4 is compared with PSTD-4 and PSTD-2 in the long-distance propagation of EMP. The results show that the MWPSTD-4 improves efficiency while guaranteeing accuracy and is suitable for large-scale electromagnetic field simulation. The proposed method provides a basic algorithm to eliminate the numerical dispersion interference for calculating the long-distance propagation of EMP in complex spaces and is helpful for the design and calibration of satellite-borne EMP detectors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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16 pages, 4904 KiB  
Article
Development and Experimental Verification of Inorganic Electromagnetic Pulse Shielding Paint for Building Interiors Using Carbon-Based Materials
by Kyong-Pil Jang
Materials 2024, 17(12), 2863; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17122863 - 12 Jun 2024
Viewed by 964
Abstract
The term electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generally refers to high-power electromagnetic waves and can be classified into EMPs caused by nuclear weapons, non-nuclear EMPs, and EMPs caused by natural phenomena. EMPs can cause catastrophic damage to any electronic device consisting of electromagnetic components, including [...] Read more.
The term electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generally refers to high-power electromagnetic waves and can be classified into EMPs caused by nuclear weapons, non-nuclear EMPs, and EMPs caused by natural phenomena. EMPs can cause catastrophic damage to any electronic device consisting of electromagnetic components, including communications devices and transportation. In this study, the shielding effectiveness of paint was evaluated depending on the type and content of carbon material and binder. To analyze the compatibility and dispersibility improvement of the raw materials used in paint manufacturing, experiments were conducted in two stages, using 27 mixtures. The shielding effectiveness was evaluated for the optimal mixture developed through mixture experiments. The results of this study confirmed that the developed EMP shielding paint can improve the shielding effectiveness of concrete by 25–40 dB. Additionally, the adhesion strength and moisture resistance evaluation of the EMP shielding paint were evaluated. The average adhesive strength of the EMP shielding paint was 1.26 MPa. In moisture-resistance testing at a temperature of 50 ± 3 °C and a relative humidity of 95% or higher for more than 120 h, no cracks or peeling were observed on the painted surface. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Construction and Building Materials)
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9 pages, 6506 KiB  
Article
Influence of the Experimental Setup on Electromagnetic Pulses in the VHF Band at Relativistic High-Power Laser Facilities
by Michael Ehret, Luca Volpe, Jon Imanol Apiñaniz, Maria Dolores Rodríguez-Frías and Giancarlo Gatti
Photonics 2024, 11(5), 459; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics11050459 - 14 May 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1734
Abstract
We present experimental results for the controlled mitigation of the electromagnetic pulses (EMPs) produced in the interactions of a 1 PW high-power 30 fs Ti:Sa laser VEGA-3 with solid-density targets transparent to laser-forward-accelerated relativistic electrons. This study aims at the band of very [...] Read more.
We present experimental results for the controlled mitigation of the electromagnetic pulses (EMPs) produced in the interactions of a 1 PW high-power 30 fs Ti:Sa laser VEGA-3 with solid-density targets transparent to laser-forward-accelerated relativistic electrons. This study aims at the band of very high frequencies (VHFs), i.e., those in the hundreds of MHz, which comprise the fundamental cavity modes of the rectangular VEGA-3 vacuum chamber. We demonstrate mode suppression by a tailoring of the laser-produced space charge distribution. Full article
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20 pages, 6436 KiB  
Review
Advanced Diagnostics of Electrons Escaping from Laser-Produced Plasma
by Josef Krása, Michal Krupka, Shubham Agarwal, Vincenzo Nassisi and Sushil Singh
Plasma 2024, 7(2), 366-385; https://doi.org/10.3390/plasma7020021 - 13 May 2024
Viewed by 1800
Abstract
This article provides an up-to-date overview of the problems associated with the detection of hot electrons escaping from laser-produced plasma and corresponding return current flowing from the ground to the target, which neutralises the positive charge occurring on the target due to the [...] Read more.
This article provides an up-to-date overview of the problems associated with the detection of hot electrons escaping from laser-produced plasma and corresponding return current flowing from the ground to the target, which neutralises the positive charge occurring on the target due to the escaped electrons. In addition, the target holder system acts as an antenna emitting an electromagnetic pulse (EMP), which is powered by the return target. If the amount of positive charge generated on the target is equal to the amount of charge carried away from the plasma by the escaping electrons, the measurement of the return current makes it possible to determine this charge, and thus also the number of escaped electrons. Methods of return current detection in the mA–10 kA range is presented, and the corresponding charge is compared to the charge determined using calibrated magnetic electron energy analysers. The influence of grounded and insulated targets on the number of escaped electrons and EMP intensity is discussed. In addition to EMP detection, mapping of the electrical potential near the target is mentioned. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Latest Review Papers in Plasma Science 2023)
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19 pages, 9418 KiB  
Article
Impact Analysis of High-Altitude Electromagnetic Pulse Coupling Effects on Power Grid Protection Relays
by Naga Lakshmi Thotakura, Yuru Wu, David Mignardot, Liang Zhang, Wei Qiu, Lawrence C. Markel, Dahan Liao, Benjamin W. McConnell and Yilu Liu
Electronics 2024, 13(7), 1336; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13071336 - 2 Apr 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2130
Abstract
Protection relays are important equipment used for protection, control, and metering functions in the power grid. These relays are used to protect critical and difficult-to-replace equipment, like generators, transformers, and capacitor banks. Once the protection devices are disturbed or damaged, a high risk [...] Read more.
Protection relays are important equipment used for protection, control, and metering functions in the power grid. These relays are used to protect critical and difficult-to-replace equipment, like generators, transformers, and capacitor banks. Once the protection devices are disturbed or damaged, a high risk of power generation interruption occurs. Therefore, it is important and necessary to study the relay’s immunity to electromagnetic pulse (EMP) events. As a preliminary step toward empirical experimentation on actual equipment, this manuscript outlines an economical and efficient methodology for evaluating the impact of an EMP. An impedance measurement strategy was employed to model the equipment, setting the stage for subsequent immunity analyses. These analyses included the pulse current injection (PCI) method, which utilized an injecting probe to introduce the transient, and frequency domain electromagnetic (FEKO) simulation, which integrated electromagnetic coupling effects into the transient simulation. The impedance measurement and simulation results in this paper provide a reliable basis for gauging equipment performance in the face of HEMP threats. The results obtained using the PCI and FEKO simulations demonstrated the performance of different port responses under a high-altitude EMP, indicating the requirement for some protection to ensure the reliable operation of relays. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Circuit and Signal Processing)
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13 pages, 4308 KiB  
Article
Transformation of the Shape and Spectrum of an Ultrawideband Electromagnetic Pulse in a “Gigantic” Coaxial Line Filled with Magnetized Plasma
by Ilya Zudin, Mikhail Gushchin, Sergey Korobkov, Askold Strikovskiy, Alexandr Katkov, Vasiliy Kochedykov and Irina Petrova
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(2), 705; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14020705 - 14 Jan 2024
Viewed by 1260
Abstract
A propagation of ultrawideband electromagnetic pulses (UWB EMPs) through magnetized plasma has been experimentally studied using a “gigantic” coaxial line, which has been developed at IAP RAS for laboratory modeling of ionospheric effects. This coaxial line is 1.4 m in diameter and 10 [...] Read more.
A propagation of ultrawideband electromagnetic pulses (UWB EMPs) through magnetized plasma has been experimentally studied using a “gigantic” coaxial line, which has been developed at IAP RAS for laboratory modeling of ionospheric effects. This coaxial line is 1.4 m in diameter and 10 m in length and is installed inside the chamber of the large-scale Krot plasma device. The line can be filled with rf inductively coupled plasma, magnetized or not. It allows one to explore the propagation of UWB EMPs in plasma along a long path without refraction and divergence and obtain a physical picture of EMP transformation. Under conditions where the duration of the UWB EMP is comparable to the period of electron plasma oscillations (fp−1), the period of cyclotron rotation of electrons (fc−1), or even significantly shorter, a complex of effects of transformation of the waveform and frequency spectrum of the pulse occurs. Without ambient magnetic field, a UWB EMP is distorted due to the effects of the cutoff and frequency dispersion. In dense magnetized plasma, i.e., when fp >> fc, the UWB EMP breaks into two wave packets, the high-frequency one (f > fp) and low-frequency one (f < fc). In rare magnetized plasma (fp << fc), the cyclotron absorption produces a long train of damped oscillations at a frequency close to the cyclotron frequency fc following the UWB EMP. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Applied Physics General)
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