Pulsed electromagnetic field indicator

AI Thread Summary
A user is seeking assistance in designing an LED indicator that activates when near a pulsed electromagnetic field, specifically for a medical application related to bone healing. The electromagnetic field strength is noted at 790 milligauss, with a pulse frequency of 3.8 kHz and 350 pulses per second. Suggestions include using a pickup coil to generate a voltage that can be amplified and possibly tested with a sound card. The user is considering purchasing a gauss meter to determine if it can detect the electromagnetic field, particularly questioning the effectiveness of a low-cost model. The discussion emphasizes the importance of confirming the functionality of the device visually through the LED indicator.
Trikemenace86
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I just found this forum and would love some help on creating an indicator that lights up when placed next to a pulsed electromagnetic field. I'm thinking a small LED that lights up when placed near a pulsed electromagnetic field to confirm the electromagnetic field is active.

How would I design this? I would like to use the housing of a small key ring flashlight with an LED in it.
My question is what internals would I need to create the LED to turn on simply by placing the unit near a pulsed electromagnetic field?

Thanks for the help guys
 
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Trikemenace86 said:
I just found this forum and would love some help on creating an indicator that lights up when placed next to a pulsed electromagnetic field. I'm thinking a small LED that lights up when placed near a pulsed electromagnetic field to confirm the electromagnetic field is active.

How would I design this? I would like to use the housing of a small key ring flashlight with an LED in it.
My question is what internals would I need to create the LED to turn on simply by placing the unit near a pulsed electromagnetic field?

Thanks for the help guys

Welcome to the PF.

What is the source of the field? How strong is it, and what is the center frequency? How often is it pulsed? If you hold an AM radio next to it, can you tune the radio to hear the pulses? Or maybe an FM radio?
 
It is a medical application for use as a bone growth stimulator to promote healing of bone fractures.
My interest is in proving that the unit is actually functioning and emitting a pulse. If I can show this visually by lighting an LED then I'm happy.

To answer your questions:
The pulsed electromagnetic field strength is 790 milligauss
The pulses are 3.8 kHz per pulse and 350 pulses per second

I havn't tried the radio experiment but that's a good idea and something I will try.

Let me know what you think
 
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Thanks for the help guys. I'm now considering buying a gauss meter. I noticed that most of them have a peak sensitivity in hertz- my device is putting out 3.8khz per pulse. Does this mean I'm going to need to purchase one of the more expensive units that reads kHz or will the $13 Elf Zone reader with LED's suffice?
 
Elf Zone reader: I have no idea what this will do. It could pick up stray fields in your environment or any local ghosts you may have (? :nb)). Or it may work fine.
It seems sensitive and wideband (to 10KHz)
 
I tried the radio experiment both AM and FM and there was no interference with either frequency. I suppose that's understandable since the frequency is 3.8khz
I guess I will buy the cheapest gauss meter (elf zone) and see if that picks up anything from the device
 
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