Magnetic flux quantum
The magnetic flux quantum Φ0 is the quantum of magnetic flux passing through a superconductor. The inverse of the flux quantum, 1/Φ0, is called the Josephson constant, and is denoted KJ.It is a property of a supercurrent (superconducting electrical current) that the magnetic flux passing through any area bounded by such a current is quantized. The quantum of magnetic flux is a physical constant, as it is independent of the underlying material as long as it is a superconductor. Its value is
A similar effect occurs when a superconductor is placed in a magnetic field. At sufficiently high field strengths, some of the magnetic field may penetrate the superconductor in the form of thin threads of material that have turned normal. These threads, which are sometimes called fluxons because they carry magnetic flux, are in fact the central regions ("cores") of vortices in the supercurrent. Each fluxon carries an integer number of magnetic flux quanta.
The magnetic flux quantum may be measured with great precision by exploiting the Josephson effect. In fact, when coupled with the measurement of the quantum Hall resistance quantum RH = h / e², this provides the most precise values of Planck's constant h obtained to date. This is remarkable since h is generally associated with the behavior of microscopically small systems, whereas the quantization of magnetic flux in a superconductor and the quantum Hall effect are both collective phenomena associated with thermodynamically large numbers of particles.
The quantization of magnetic flux is closely related to the Aharonov-Bohm effect, but was predicted earlier by F. London in 1948 using a phenomenological model.