I had never thought of using a vacuum tube, interesting, though as you say a point source or beam would be better. I played with passing 12 volts through a Tail light bulb, but at more than a small current it only nociably flooded the vessel with light. Playing with varous grids, I've found that an open ended tube at moderate negative voltages produces a a nice aimed beam, presumably an electron beam. But, with perminate magnets the central grid cathode is not a problem as the electrons/ plasma are quickly hitting the magnet poles anyway. I didn't know perminate ring magnets could be given an axial field, but I did see them on the linked supplier. I guess it makes sence since that was presumably the makeup of WB1 and 2. I'm currently playing with other smaller containers as vacuum vessels to try to ease the load on my old pump and decrease outgassing problems. It is too small to hold a microwave magnet array. The pressure cooker pictures are mostly eye candy. It is too leaky (and contaminated with vaporized gunk) to do more than visual demo work.MSimon wrote:It depends on the amount of cathode current needed. 6L6s and variants are common for the 100 ma or so range. A 12AX7 or 12AT7 is good in the 10 ma range. The versions made by the Soviets (now Russians) are considered good and not too expensive.alexjrgreen wrote:Dan,D Tibbets wrote:In a spherical cusp system like the Polywell I believe the results would be the same, though with perhaps complications.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambipolar_diffusion
Dan Tibbets
The pictures of the permanent magnet polywell in your pressure cooker seem to show a spherical grid cathode. Do you have an electron gun for it?
MSimon can probably suggest the cheapest vacuum tube to break to get one...
Given the success of your first attempt, it would be interesting to set up a wiffleball without the grid.
The difficulty I see is that they are linear and not point sources. Some collimation may be required. and that complicates things.
Thoriated tungsten wire may be a better bet.
Tom Ligon used filamented auto headlights as emitters.
I will say though, that with the ~ 10-30 ma of current, and a few thousand volts of potential. The cusp areas were demonstrated and the curving edge of the magnetic borders possibly were pushed out some(?) with invreasing voltage and current. but the morphology did not visibly change, so I assume my conditions do not come close to those needed for potential wiffleball conditions( if even possible with the poles on the faces of the magnets). Even with my weaker magnets, my currents have been ~ 1000 times less than WB6 (~ 40 amps of electron current at beta=1).
Dsan Tibbets
Dan Tibbets