Author_Institution :
General Atomics, San Diego, CA, USA
Abstract :
General atomics is developing urban Maglev technology sponsored by the Federal Transit Administration and funded under the Transportation Equity Act for the 21/sup st/ Century (TEA- 21). The system is levitated, propelled, and guided by electromagnetic forces. Levitation is achieved by using simple, passive permanent magnets arranged in a "Halbach" array configuration. Propulsion, and guidance are achieved by a linear synchronous motor mounted on the track. The uniqueness of the approach is its simplicity, ruggedness, and performance, including 10% grade, 18.3 m (60 ft.) turn radius, one-inch levitation gap, and quiet operation. Use of elevated guideways, coupled with the quiet operation of the system, eliminates the need to tunnel underground for noise-abatement, and can result in significantly lower system costs. We have built full-scale hardware to demonstrate the levitation, propulsion, guidance, and location detection systems. We are currently building a 120 m (400 ft.) test track with a full-scale chassis and power system at general atomics in San Diego. CA. The chassis and power systems have already been built and are under-going initial testing. The track is completed for dynamic testing in 2004. This paper reports on the overall program progress to date and description of the planned testing.
Keywords :
electromagnetic forces; legislation; linear synchronous motors; magnetic levitation; noise abatement; permanent magnets; propulsion; rail traffic; 120 m; 18.3 m; Halbach array configuration; dynamic testing; electromagnetic forces; general atomics; linear synchronous motor; location detection systems; magnetic levitation; noise-abatement; passive permanent magnets; propulsions; urban Maglev technology; Electromagnetic forces; Electromagnetic launching; Magnetic levitation; Permanent magnets; Power system dynamics; Power systems; Propulsion; Synchronous motors; System testing; US Department of Transportation;