Vacuum arc
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A vacuum arc can arise when the surfaces of metal electrodes in contact with a good vacuum begin to emit electrons either through heating (thermionic emission) or via an electric field that is sufficient to cause field emission. Once initiated, a vacuum arc can persist since the freed particles gain kinetic energy from the electric field, heating the metal surfaces through high speed particle collisions. This process can create an incandescent cathode spot which frees more particles, thereby sustaining the arc. At sufficiently high currents an incandescent anode spot may also be formed.
Electrical discharge in vacuum is important for certain types of vacuum tubes and for high voltage vacuum switches.
[edit] References
- Messyats, Gennady A.; Proskurovsky, D. I. (1989). Pulsed Electrical Discharge in Vacuum (Springer Series on Atoms and Plasmas, 5), 1st Edition, Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-50725-6.
- Greenwood, Allan (1994). Vacuum Switchgear (I E E Power Engineering Series), 1st Edition, Pergamon Press. ISBN 0-85296-855-8.