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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcrware!grayhawk.rent.com!iowegia!quest
- From: quest@iowegia.uucp (Steve J. Quest)
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: Re: Q: How to de-Gauss a room?
- Message-ID: <kHVZXB3w165w@iowegia.uucp>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 93 11:23:19 CST
- References: <C1F4nG.JtK@ms.uky.edu>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Iowegia Public Access Usenet/UUCP, Clive IA USA.
- Lines: 65
-
- bmw@ncc.uky.edu (Brian Whiting) writes:
-
- > I thought my problem might be of interest to this group. I have recently
- > moved into a suite of rooms which formerly housed a magnetic resonance
- > imaging facility, with field strengths of ~70,000 Gauss. Shielding was
- > not perfect because they had painted lines on the floor indicating presence
- > of 5 Gauss field.
- >
- > The problem is that there is a remanant field in the room, first evidenced
- > by skewed, blotchy computer monitors. Compass readings show presence of
- > a dipole which corresponds to former orientation of magnet in room. I
- > am waiting to borrow a Gaussmeter to quantify the field.
- >
- > Naturally, I feel that an environment such as this is not appropriate
- > for my computer lab. In particular, I fear for the long-term integrity
- > of my data on disk and tape. In addition, there may be a pacemaker hazard
- > if the field is strong enough. Is there any information available on the
- > field strength in which it is safe to operate disks?
- >
- > Best of all would be to remove the field entirely from the room. Aside
- > from the obvious approaches of raising the room temp above the Curie
- > point or placing a strong magnetic in the opposite orientation, is there
- > any way to get rid of this field? Please e-mail me, as I don't normally
- > read this group. If there is enough interest, I will summarize back to
- > the group.
-
-
- Brian,
-
- You have a unique problem- one which I am sure others down
- the road will experience as MRI becomes more commonplace. I have
- not heard of a site pulling out equipment to date, so therefore
- have not heard of this problem.
-
- The problem you are experiencing is residual magetization
- of all ferrous structures built in and about the room. This can
- be steel reinforcements in the floor, steel studs in the wall,
- etc. There is no "easy" way to degauss a room. I can speculate
- that it would take a powerful alternating magnetic field, that
- slowly drops in intensity. Since they had magnetic resonance
- imaging equipment in the room, there should still be high current
- three phase AC power feed available (we hope). Find a large
- magnet, maybe you can borrow a junkyard electromagnet for the job-
- and stick it in close proximity to where the superconducting
- magnet of the MRI sat. Now comes the tricky part- feed this large
- magnet as much current at single phase AC (60 cycle is good- no
- need to change that) as it will take. Heat it up if necessary,
- and then diminish the amplitude of the wave. Speculatively, I
- would install in series with the feed wire to the magnet a bunch
- of high wattage lightbulbs (resistors). Please bear with me, I
- think cheap and this will be cheap and effective. Make sure that
- the lightbulbs will only barely light up at the current you are
- feeding. Also make sure the bulbs are rated to drop the WHOLE of
- the voltage you are using to feed the magnet. Using insulated
- cutters, one by one clip out one leg of the lamps. The remaining
- lamps in parallel with one another (forgot to mention that
- earlier that the lamps are to be installed in parallel) will begin
- to drop more and more of the voltage- thus reducing the magnetic
- wave from the magnet. Do the clipping out of lightbulbs
- gradually, one by one, over a period of several minutes (how ever
- long the magnet can stand without overheating). When you get down
- to the last lamp, clip it as well- disconnect power, and you are
- done. This method should work- but it is all theory concocted
- just now in my head, but I do believe it will work............sq
-
-