US2419172A - Electron discharge device having coupled coaxial line resonators - Google Patents

Electron discharge device having coupled coaxial line resonators Download PDF

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US2419172A
US2419172A US510868A US51086843A US2419172A US 2419172 A US2419172 A US 2419172A US 510868 A US510868 A US 510868A US 51086843 A US51086843 A US 51086843A US 2419172 A US2419172 A US 2419172A
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cathode
coaxial line
line resonators
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Lloyd P Smith
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J25/00Transit-time tubes, e.g. klystrons, travelling-wave tubes, magnetrons
    • H01J25/50Magnetrons, i.e. tubes with a magnet system producing an H-field crossing the E-field
    • H01J25/52Magnetrons, i.e. tubes with a magnet system producing an H-field crossing the E-field with an electron space having a shape that does not prevent any electron from moving completely around the cathode or guide electrode
    • H01J25/58Magnetrons, i.e. tubes with a magnet system producing an H-field crossing the E-field with an electron space having a shape that does not prevent any electron from moving completely around the cathode or guide electrode having a number of resonators; having a composite resonator, e.g. a helix
    • H01J25/587Multi-cavity magnetrons

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April 15, 1947. l L. P. sMiTH 2,419,172
ELECTRON DIS-CHARGE DEVICE HAVING`COUPLED COAXIAL LIN RESONATORS Filed Nov. 19, 1945 s sheets-sheet 1 Mmmmmm@ @zwmmmwm M @mmmmmw @@@'@@{w@ m@ 4 M@@ME@@@@ www@ www@ a@ ,3 E@ @Hw @HM wm www mwmmmwm ..Z- Mmmmfwmw@ @WM M @wm@mwnmw INVENTOR 'B wf@ A ATTORNEY L. P. SMITH April 15, 1947.
ELECTRON DISCHARGE DEVICE HAVING COUPLED COAXIAL LINE RESONATORS Filed Nov. 19, 1943 5 Sheets-Sheet INVENTOR L YD P. SMITH ATTORNEY L. P. SMITH 2,419,172
ELECTRON DISCHARGEDEVICE HAVING 'COUPLED COAXIAL LINE RESONATORS April 15, 1947.
Filed Nov. 19, 1943 5 Sheets-Sheet 5 |7Tlll/llll/llll/l/1lllllllllllll//lll/lllllllll/l/l/ll//l/lllll/l 111/ l/l/l/lll/llll//ll/llll//ll/ll/lll//lllll INVENTOR LLo D P. Smm-4 W@ ATTORNEY Patented Apr. l5, 1947 ELECTRON. DISCHARGE DEVICE HAVING COUPLE@ CCAXIAL LENE RESONATORS Lloyd P. Smith, Princeton, N. J., assignor to Radio Corporation of America, a corporation of Dela- Ware Application November 19, 1943, Serial No. 510,868
(Cl. Z50-27.5)
1'7 Claims.
i 1 `.lylydnvention relates to electron discharge devices-and associated circuitsuseful at ultra high frequencies, .and more particularly to magnetrons utilizing cavity .resonator circuits.
VvIrl-certain types of magnetrons the anode segmentsr are interconnected by means of cavity resonator .circuits and form together the anode structure forthe magnetron. One such construction comprises an1elongated centrally positioned .cathode having an anode member surrounding the cathode and provided with a plurality of cavity .resonator circuits ormed'by cylindrical cavities in the anodemember, radial slotsv extending -betweenithese cavities and thev space Vhetweenthe cathode and the anode member, the anode segmentsibeing iorinedby the portions of the anode vmember positioned .between adjacent slots, the slots `lyingparallel tothe cathode.
` In conventional multi-slot or multi-cavity magnetrons, there are two main dimculties-which arise in their use. One difficulty is connected .with the .fact that a number of possible modes or .operation exist, some of which are associated with different `frequencies and some of which are ,degenerate and are associated with a single frequency. For example, 'in a twelve-slot anode magnetron structure it is possible to have eleven diiierent modes in six distinct frequencies, the mode associated with one .frequency being nondegenerate while all of -the other modes are doubly degenerative. Since all .six frequencies lie so near one another, frequency instability may develop under load. Because ofthe small differences between the frequencies, vit is'dilicult to corinne the generation of powerto just one of the modes.
vAnother difficulty encountered in magnetron operation comes from the fact that in a perfectly symmetrical cylindrical arrangement of slots there is .another type of `degeneration present, namely 4rotational degeneracy. This means that the iield` pattern ymay be rotated an arbitrary numberof slots without changing the operation of the'magnetron. In other words `there is nothing to :the viield pattern so far as rotation is concerned. A small perturbation of the symmetry of the system will, however, -1emove this degeneracy and lthereby the rotational position of the -iield pattern. In a practical magnetron, the coupling loop placed in or lnear one of the slots serves 'to x the rotational position of the field pattern, However, itcan-be shown that the iield pattern will assume that posit-ion for whichthe least `magnetic flux associated vwith rone Yof the degenerate modes will link the load coupling loop.
Z Thus it is possible' that themagnetron may operatein such a modethat'no magnetic iiuxwould exist `in .the .slot containing the couplin'gloop. The magnetron could thus unload itself. The results are extremely important. For example,
. if one coupling loop were used a magnetron operating .in one of the-degenerate modes couldappear to be a very ineicient vgenerator of -this mode. Actually the eld intensity inside the magnetron for this kmode could be very highand the energy be lost in circulating current losses in the walls. lThis in fact can llead ,to such high electric elds inthe slots that sparking occurs..
Because of the closeness of the 'frequencies `'of ysome ofthe modes, it ispossible for a loaded magnetronito oscillate'in `two modes at once. In ,this` case withone coupling loop used the field for 'the uncoupled moclecan'become very high, thus again bringing vabout poor eiiiciency.
It is, therefore, an object of my invention -to provide an electron ydischarge device ofthe magnetronv type having improved characteristics. fit isra .further object of my invention toproduce such a device of the multi-segment typein which undesired modes of operation are suppressed;
More specifically it iis 'anobject of my invention-to provide such an electron-discharge device utilizing cavity resonator circuits of improved design which insure operation only in the desired mode or modes. f
A furtherobject of my inventionisto provide a magnetron using cavity resonator,V circuits including improved means for coupling the magnetron to a load.
The novel features which I believe to be characteristic of my-invention are'set forth with particularity inthe appended claims, kbut the invention itself will best be understood by reference to the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawing in Awhich Figure 1 showsa ltransverse section of a conventional :multi-slot cavity resonator type magnetron, Figure 2 is a diagrammatic representation of the modes of operation of the dev-ice shown in Figure l, Figure 3 is a transverse section of an electron discharge device and associated circuit niade according to my invention, Figure 4 is -a longitudinal section of the device shown in Figure 1, Figure 5 is a diagram representing the electromagnetic elds in a device made according to my invention, and Figure 6 is a longitudinal perspective View yof the cavity resonator associated with an electron discharge device made-according to my inventionand the wall current, and
electric and magnetic field relationships diagrammatically represented.
In one form of magnetron of the so-called multi-cavity type or multi-slot typeas shown in Figure 1 and provided with an envelope I0, an elongated indirectly heated cathode I I has spaced around the cathode and extending radially therefrom a plurality of anode segments I2 surrounded in turn by a tubular wall I3 closing the ends of the anode segments so as to provide cavity resonators between adjacent anode segments. The anode assembly may be made in various ways, either by stacking punched-out plates or by forming from a solid block, or by the use of radial fin-like inserts in a tubular member. Energy may be coupled out of the magnetron by means of coupling loop Ill and the electromagnetic field provided by means of an electromagnetic coil I5.
As pointed out above, a tube of this kind may have a number of possible modes of operation, some of which are associated with different frequencies and some of which are degenerate and are associated with a single frequency. In the case of the tube such as shown in Figure 1 having twelve slots, eleven different modes and six distinct frequencies may be generated. The magnetic field patterns for all these modes are diagrammatically shown in Figure 2. In viewing these figures the anode block and cylinder may be viewed as cut along a longitudinal axis and the cylinder unrolled so that the open ends of the slots `are viewed. The magnetic field pattern labeled 11:6 is the only non-degenerate mode as indicated by the arrows representing a magnetic eld line, it being noted that all of the adjacent arrows point inthe same direction. This means there is'only one eld pattern which is associated with the frequency which may be referred to as the at frequency. The two magnetic iieldfpatterns labeled n:5 are the two linearly independent patterns associated with a slightly lower frequency ws. Thus the mode 1i:5 is two fold degenerate. By independent patterns associated with the frequency ws is meant those pat-V terns chosen such that any and all possible iield patterns associated with the frequency wa may be formed by a superposition of the two fundamental or independent field patterns. Because of the small difference between the frequency we and o5, it is diiicult to confine the generation f power to just one of these modes. Other modes and thedegenerative action in these modes are shown in figures 7b:4, n:3, n:2, n :L The letter 11 designates the number of periods through which the magnetic field goes once around the anode structure; that is. 12:6 means that the iield goes through 6 complete periods or 12 reversals.
However, a magnetron made in accordance with my invention and as illustrated in Figures 3 and 4 suppresses substantially all the undesired modes. A device made according to my invention includes a preferably indirectly heated cathode 2l) Ysurrounded by a hollow tubular member or cylinder 2| having radially extending therefrom a plurality of plate-like anode segments or elements 22 and 23, the anode segments 23 being longer longitudinally than the anode segments A22 and being closed at their ends by means of closure members 2s and 25. The cathode is supported by the magnetic inserts 26 and 2'! supported from the closure members 24 and 25 by means of the glass bead supporting arrangement 28 and 29. Surrounding the magnetron assembly is a drum-like cavity resonator comprising the outside .cylindrical member 30 closed by means of closure end members 3l and 32, which are sealed vacuum-tight to the member 30. The cathode heater leads Ill and I0" extend through the closure member. A coupling loop for the outside resonator is shown at 3l.
In eiect the alternate long and short anode segments 22-23 produce quarterwave concentric line cavity resonators open adjacent the anodecathode space land `closed at the ends remote from this space.
In Figure 5 is shown an unfolded portion of the anode segment arrangement and the magnetic iields established in the coaxial line resonators. In this structure the magnetic flux through a slot is not permited to divide at the upper and lower ends of the slot and pass through the slot on either side. In the present arrangement nearly all the iiux, for example, through the slot 40 is required to pass through the slot 4 I. This is accomplished by making every other metal vane, for example 23, long enough to make good electrical contact with the top and bottom cover-plates 243 and 25. The vane or iin 22 is made short enough to permit ilux lines to pass around the ends as shown in Figure 5. Thus the fin or vane 22 behaves like the inner conductor of the quarterwave transmission line. Although the magnetic flux is not permitted to pass into further adjoining slots, there is still electric coupling between similar elements of the structure and the electric field alternates when the inner circumference is traversed as it is in the conventional mode 11,:6. This improves the coupling since a simultaneous electric and magnetic coupling can reduce the electric coupling between the adjoining slots. The fact that the magnetic flux is not permitted out of adjoining slots means that the undesired modes 1L:5, 11:4, etc., will not take place.
As pointed out above, another di'iculty encountered in magnetron operation comes from the fact that in a perfectly symmetrical cylindrical arrangement of slots as shown in Figure l there is another type of, degeneracy present, namely rotational degeneracy; that is, the iield pattern can be rotated an arbitrary number of slots without changing the operation of the magnetron. In a practical magnetron where the coupling loop is placed in or near any one of the slots and fixes the rotational position of the field pattern, the eld pattern will assume that position for which the least magnetic flux associated with one of the degenerate loads will link the load coupling loop. For example, if the magnetron were operated in the 11:5 mode and the coupling loop were in a slot, then the field pattern would assume a position such that one of the slots containing no magnetic iiux would coincide with the slot containing the coupling loop. Thus the magnetron couldunload itself. If one coupling loop were used in a magnetron operating, for example, in the 11:5 mode it would appear to be a very inefiicient generator of this mode, but as pointed out a field intensity inside the magnetron for this mode could be very high and the energy would be lost in circulating current losses in the walls of the device. Since the frequencies we and ws are so close together it is possible for a loaded magnetron to oscillate in the two modes at once and when this is the case and one coupling loop is used only the 11:6 mode is coupled to the load while the field for the 1i:5 mode is not and can become very high. Again the magnetron would show poor efcency.
In iaccordance: with my invention I `provide means for'reducingthe likelihood of the operation intheundesired modes and at thev same time notiallow the magnetron to readily uncoupleitself from the load.
Inorder to couple out the power from the magnetron I provide at the top and bottom alternatelyA adjacent the short vanes, apertures communicating with the resonator surrounding the magnetron asshown in Figures 3 to 6, inclusive. As shown in Figure 6, I provide a'resonator having inner and outer radii a and b respectively and length l. The dimensions of this resonator are so chosen that it will operate in thefmode in which the electric field is radial and the magnetic flux lines are circles as shown by arrows H in Figure 6 with centers on the axis of the coaxial cylinders. The wall current andelectric eld relationships are shown by the lines I and E. The direction of the magnetic flux in the upper half of the resonator is opposed to that in the lower half as shown in the left of Figure 6, as lines I-I. In selecting the dimensions which make frequencies of this mode coincide with the resonant frequency of this slot, itis advantageous to make the ratio b to a greater than two and thereafter bring the frequencies to the right value by selecting the length l. If this is not done the difference in frequency ofthe mode under consideration and the next higher frequency may become too small so that this undesirable mode might also be excited. The appropriate dimensions can be readily calculated. The coupling between slots and cylindrical cavity is accomplished by apertures 35 and 36 in the backs of the slots located at opposite endsadjacent the slots. At these places the magnetic field in the slotk is largest and is for the most part horizontal ,as shown` inthe-figure. In the upper part of alternate slots thisvi'ield will be in the same direction as, and is made to match with, the ileld in the cylindrical resonator which is alsolargenear the inner wall. In the slots of the lower ends,.forY example, slots 35, the magnetic Vield is opposite but matches the eld in the lower part of the cylindrical resonator. In this Waythere is coupling between all slots and the main resonator and the tendency to uncouple, present where coupling loop is in one slot, is materially reduced. The modes m25, 4, etc., are discouraged. The fields are thus made more uniform throughout, thereby facilitating transfer of electric energy to one mode of the high frequency field. The
coupling holes are placed so as not to interfere with the large circulating currents at the back of the slots. The coupling of the load to the large cylindrical resonator can be done in a conventional way either by means of a loop, such as 3l, or a wave guide.
A magnetron with a considerable number of slots constructed in a manner described above will haveY Very much greater frequency stability and very high efiiciency. The possibility of obtaining good eiciency in magnetrons with many slots makes it feasible to use lower anode voltages.
While I have indicated the preferred embodiments of my invention of which I am now aware and havealso indicated only one specific application for which my invention may be employed, it will be apparent that myy invention is by no means limited to the exact forms illustrated or the use indicated, but that many variations may rbe made in the particular structure used and the pur-pose for which it is employed without depart- `6 ing from the scope of, my invention as set forth in :the appended: claims.
What' I claim: as new is:
l. A device for use at ultra high frequenciesand comprising a plurality of adjacent coaxial line resonators, a cavity resonator having a wall closingone end of eachof said coaxial line resonators, said cavity resonator having apertures in the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators and communicating with said cavity resonator, and means adjacent the open ends of said coaxial line resonators for energizing said coaxial line resonators.
2. A device for use at ultrafhigh frequencies comprising a plurality of adjacent coaxial lineresonators each closed at one end and open at the other end, a cavity resonator adjacent the closed ends ci said coaxial line resonators, the closed ends'of said coaxial line resonators having apertures communicating with the interior of said hollow resonator, means adjacent the open ends of said coaxial'line resonators for energizing said coaxial line resonators.
3. A device for use at ultra high frequencies and including a cavity resonator anda plurality of coaxial line resonators extending from said cavity-resonator and each closed at one end by cavity resonator, said coaxial line resonators having elongated rectangular-shaped transverse sections, said cavity resonator having apertures communicating with the closed end of said coaxial line resonators, alternate apertures being disposed at opposite sides of the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators, and means including an electron source for supplying electrons adjacent open ends of said coaxialline resonators for energizing said coaxial line resonators.
4, A device for use at ultra high frequencies andV including a cavity resonator and a plurality oi coaxial line resonators extending from said cavity resonator and each closed at one end by said cavity resonator, said cavity resonator having apertures communicating with the closed end of said coaxial vline resonators, and means including electron source adjacent said coaxial linev resonators for supplying electrons adjacent the'open ends of said coaxial line resonators for energizing said coaxial` lineV resonators.
5. A device for use at kultra high frequencies and including a cavity resonator having a shape formed by a surface of revolution, coaxial line resonators extending inwardly from said cavity resonator and radiallythereof toward the axis of said resonator, and means positioned axially of said coaxial line resonators for energizing said resonators, said cavity resonator being provided with` a pluralityoi apertures providing communicating passa-geways between the interior of the cavity resonator and the ends of said coaxial line resonators adjacent saidr cavity resonator.
6. A4 device useful at ultra high frequencies and comprising a plurality of qnarterwave coaxial line resonators having inner and outer ends, inner ends of said resonators surrounding a space and a caviti7 resonator surrounding the coaxial line resonators and contacting the outer ends of said coaxial resonators closing the said outer ends of said coaxial line resonators, said cavity resonator havinga plurality Aof apertures providing communicating passageways between said cavity resonator and said coaial line resonators, and means within the space surrounded by the ends of said coaxial line resonators for energizing said coaxial line resonators.
'7-. An electron discharge Ydevice havinga hollow 'drum-like member and an elongated cathode positioned axially of and within said drumlike member, and radially extending plate-like members contacting the wall of said drum-like member and extending radially toward said cathode, alternate plate-like members of shorter axial length than the other plate-like members and spaced at their ends from the ends of the drumlike member whereby a plurality of coaxial line resonators are provided having one end closed and their open ends adjacent said cathode, a tubular member surrounding said drum-like member and coaxial with said drum-like member, and members closing the ends of said drumlike member and said coaxial tubular member providing a cavity resonator, the walls of said drum-like member having apertures providing communicating passageways between the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators and said cavity resonator.
8. An electron discharge device including a pair of concentric coaxial tubular members and flat closure members closing the ends of said tubular members and providing a central hollow chamber surrounded by a second hollow chamber, radially directed plate-like elements extending from the inner wall of the inner tubular member, and a second closure means closing the ends of said radially extending plate-like members, alternate plate-like members being of shorter axial length than the other plate-like members and having spaces between the ends of the shorter plate-like members and said second closure means providing a plurality of radially directed coaxial line resonators having open ends adjacent a central space, and a cathode mounted within said central space, the wall of said inner tubular member having apertures communicating with the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators, and magnetic inserts positioned at opposite ends of the cathode and between the closure members.
9. An electron discharge device including a pair of concentric coaxial tubular members and dat closure members closing the ends of said tubular members and providing a central hollow chamber surrounded by a second hollow chamber, radially directed plate-like elements extending from the inner wall of the inner tubular member, and a second closure means closing the ends of said radially extending plate-like members, alternate plate-like members being of shorter axial length than the other plate-like members and having spaces between the ends of the shorter plate-like members and said second closure means providing a plurality of radially directed coaxial line resonators having open ends adjacent a central space, and a cathode mounted within said central space, the wall of said inner tubular member having apertures providing communicating passageways between the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators and the interior of said cavity resonator, and magnetic inserts positioned at opposite ends of the cathode and between the closure members, a coupling loop extending into said second hollow chamber, and magnetic means linked with said magnetic inserts.
10'. An electron discharge device having an elongated cathode, a cylindrically shaped anode member surrounding and coaxial with said cath- 0de and including a plurality of plate-like elements extending radially toward and parallel to said cathode, alternate plate-like elements being of shorter axial length than the other plate-like elements, conducting means contacting the ends of the longer plate-like elements and enclosing the shorter plate-like elements and the space between said plate-like elements and the cathode, whereby a plurality of coaxial line resonators are formed, one end of each of said resonators being adjacent said cathode, and means providing a magnetic field parallel to said cathode and between said cathode and said plate-like elements.
11. An electron discharge device having an elongated cathode, a cylindrically shaped anode member surrounding and coaxial with said cathode and including a plurality of plate-like elements extending radially toward and parallel to said cathode, alternate plate-like elements being of shorter axial length than the other platelike elements, flat conducting means contacting the ends of the longer plate-like elements extending above and below the shorter plate-like elements and enclosing the space between said platelike elements and the cathode, and a conducting member surrounding and enclosing said platelike elements and contacting the outer edges of said plate-like elements whereby a plurality oi coaxial line resonators are formed, the open ends of which are adjacent said cathode, and means adjacent said device for providing a magnetic `field parallel to said cathode and between said cathode and said plate-like elements.
12. A device useful at ultra high frequencies and comprising a plurality of quarterwave coaxial line resonators each closed at one end and open at the other end, the open ends of said coaxial line resonators surrounding a space, a hollow cavity resonator surrounding said coaxial line resonators and contacting the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators, each of said coaxial line resonators having an aperture providing a communicating passageway between said hollow cavity resonator and the interior of said coaxial line resonators, and means within the space enclosed `by the open ends of said coaxial line resonators for energizing said coaxial line resonators.
13. A device useful at ultra high frequencies and comprising a plurality of quarterwave coaxial line resonators each closed at one end and open at the other end, the open ends of said coaxial line resonators surrounding a space, each of said coaxial line resonators having an elongated rectangular transverse section, a hollow cavity resonator surrounding said coaxial line resonators and contacting the closed ends of said coaxial line resonators, each of said coaxial line resonators having an aperture providing a communicating passageway between said hollow cavity resonator` and the interior of said coaxial resonators, apertures in alternate coaxial line resonators being oppositely disposed, and means within the space enclosed by the open ends of said coaxial line'resonators for energizing said coaxial line resonators.
14. An electron discharge device having an elongated cathode, a plurality of radially directed rectangularly shaped plate-like members extending radially toward said cathode the ends adjacent said cathode being spaced therefrom, a conducting member coaxial with said cathode and contacting the ends of said plate-like members remote from said cathode, and closure means closing the ends of said conducting member surrounding said plate-like members and enclosing said cathode and said plate-like members, the ends of alternate plate-like members being spaced from said closure means and providing with the other plate-like members a plurality of radially v directed coaxial line resonators having open ends adjacent said cathode, and means adjacent said device for producing a xed magnetic field parallel to said cathode and between said cathode and said plate-like members.
15. An electron discharge device having an elongated cathode, a plurality of radially directed rectangularly shaped plate-like members extending radially toward said cathode, the ends adjacent said cathode being spaced therefrom, a conducting member coaxial with said cathode and contacting the ends of said plate-like members remote from said cathode, at disc-like members coaxial with said cathode and closing the ends of said member surrounding said plate like members and enclosing said cathode and said plate-like members, the ends of alternate plate-like members contacting said at disc-like members and providing with the other plate-like members a plurality of radially directed coaxial line resonators having open ends adjacent said cathode, and means adjacent said device for producing a fixed magnetic iield parallel to said cathode and between said vcathode and said plate-like members, and a cylindrical cavity resonator surrounding said plate-like members and communicating with said coaxial line resonators.
15. An electron discharge device having an elongated cathode, a plurality of radially'directed rectangularly shaped plate-like members extending toward said cathode, the ends adjacent said cathode being spaced therefrom, alternate members being of shorter axial length than the other d members, flat disc members at the ends of said plate-like members and contacting the ends of the longer plate-lil e members and providing with the shorter plate-like members a plurality of radially directed coaxial line resonators having open ends adjacent said cathode, a cylindrical cavity resonator surrounding said cathode and plate-like members and coaxial with said cathode and closing the outer ends of said coaxial line resonators, said cavity resonator having apertures in the wall adjacent said coaxial line resonators whereby the interiory of said cavity resonator communicates with the interior of said coaxial line resonators, and means adjacent said device for producing a magnetic field parallel to said cathode and between said cathode and said plate-like members.
17. An electron discharge device including an elongated cathode, a hollow cylindrical member coaxial with and surrounding said cathode, a plurality of radially directed elongated elements extending from said cylindrical member toward said cathode but spaced therefrom, alternate elements being shorter than the other elements in the direction of the axial length of said cathode closure members closing the ends of said hollow cylindrical member and contacting the ends of alternate elements providing a plurality of radially directed coaxial line resonators having open ends adjacent said cathode and closed at the ends remote from said cathode, a second hollow cylindrical member surrounding said lfirst cylindrical member and providing a hollow resonator surrounding said cathode and said radially directed elements, said rst cylindrical member having a plurality of apertures providing communicating passageways between the interior of said last resonator and said coaxial line resonators, and means adjacent said device producing a magnetic field between said cathode and said radially directed elements.
LLOYD P. SMITH.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 2,247,077 Blewett et al June 24, 1941 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 509,102 British July 11, 1939
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US3304463A (en) * 1962-09-10 1967-02-14 Gen Electric Crossed-field amplifier defining a transmission line
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US2247077A (en) * 1940-07-27 1941-06-24 Gen Electric High frequency electronic apparatus

Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2637004A (en) * 1953-04-28
US2547503A (en) * 1943-11-19 1951-04-03 Rca Corp Multiresonator magnetron
US2611110A (en) * 1944-04-19 1952-09-16 Raytheon Mfg Co Electronic discharge device of the cavity resonator type
US2655616A (en) * 1944-05-24 1953-10-13 English Electric Valve Co Ltd Magnetron
US2639403A (en) * 1945-02-27 1953-05-19 Us Sec War Strapped multicavity magnetron
US2539337A (en) * 1945-03-07 1951-01-23 Raytheon Mfg Co Electron discharge device of the magnetron type
US2496500A (en) * 1945-07-18 1950-02-07 Raytheon Mfg Co Electron discharge device
US2480126A (en) * 1945-12-14 1949-08-30 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Electron discharge device
US2614234A (en) * 1946-02-02 1952-10-14 Voge Jean Paul Oscillating and amplifying vacuum tube for very short waves
US2516522A (en) * 1946-03-01 1950-07-25 Sterling G Mcnees Parasitic suppressor for cavity resonator devices
US2463416A (en) * 1946-05-08 1949-03-01 Arnold T Nordsieck Anode for strapped magnetrons
US2501152A (en) * 1946-09-05 1950-03-21 Raytheon Mfg Co Tunable magnetron
US2565387A (en) * 1946-10-31 1951-08-21 Sylvania Electric Prod Interdigital magnetron
US2610309A (en) * 1947-04-18 1952-09-09 Csf Magnetron tube for the transmission of ultrashort waves
US2566087A (en) * 1947-06-13 1951-08-28 Csf Tube of the magnetron type for ultra-short waves
US2734148A (en) * 1950-04-03 1956-02-07 Magnetron tube
US2720628A (en) * 1950-09-05 1955-10-11 Beverly D Kumpfer Tunable cavity resonator
US2815469A (en) * 1951-01-08 1957-12-03 English Electric Valve Co Ltd Magnetron oscillators
US2727185A (en) * 1951-01-11 1955-12-13 English Electric Valve Co Ltd Magnetrons
US2808538A (en) * 1952-10-02 1957-10-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Magnetron oscillator
US2846618A (en) * 1953-01-26 1958-08-05 Litton Industries Inc Magnetron
US2828441A (en) * 1954-12-24 1958-03-25 Hans K Jenny Apertured vane magnetron
US2850672A (en) * 1957-09-16 1958-09-02 Bomac Lab Inc Magnetron anode support
US3304463A (en) * 1962-09-10 1967-02-14 Gen Electric Crossed-field amplifier defining a transmission line
US3289036A (en) * 1964-08-05 1966-11-29 Raytheon Co Inverted magnetron having adjacent anode cavities coupled in opposite phase to a central stabilizing cavity
US3384783A (en) * 1965-12-16 1968-05-21 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Mode suppression in coaxial magnetrons having diverse size anode resonator

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