Harmonic Content & Multipoles magnets
The magnetic field can be expressed on specific basis functions. We have identified two famillies of such basis:
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cylindrical,
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spherical.
Decomposing a field on a basis allows to express the field with only the coefficient in the basis. Moreover, the knowledge of few fields measurements - actually the order of precision we want to achieve on the basis function - provide us the full knwoledge of the field.
To achieve dimensionless unit for the coefficient of the basis function, the field is conveniently scaled with a reference field and radius that have to be specified to fully understand the decomposition.
1. Cylindrical harmonics
Considering a two dimensional multipole fields, one can show we have - writting B=(Bx,By,Bz) with B_z constant - the relation:
in the vacuum.
It can be very convenient to write this in the polar coordinates :
At least, if the field is measured at P equally-spaced points around a circle of radius R_{meas}, we can use the Fast Fourrier Transform to evaluate the C_n parameters.
We have to provide the various C_n coefficient (real and imaginary parts) at various altitude to fully present the field.
The method is decribed in Determination of magnetic multipoles using a hall probe and Maxwell’s equations for magnets.
A pure multipole magnet of order n has only C_n \neq 0 (C_2 \neq 0 for a dipole, C_3 for a sextupole and so on). |