Maxwell coil
[Image:VFPt maxwell coil.svg|right|thumb|300px|Magnetic field lines around a Maxwell coil]
[Image:Maxwell-coil-field-3D.png|right|thumb|300px|Modulus of the magnetic field around a Maxwell coil]
A Maxwell coil is a device for producing a large volume of almost constant magnetic field. It is named in honour of the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell.
A Maxwell coil is an improvement of a Helmholtz coil: in operation it provides an even more uniform magnetic field, but at the expense of more material and complexity.
Description
[Image:Maxwellcoils.png|Maxwell's geometry of the coils|thumb|right]A constant-field Maxwell coil set consists of three coils oriented on the surface of a virtual sphere. According to Maxwell's original 1873 design: each of the outer coils should be of radius, and distance from the plane of the central coil of radius.
Maxwell specified the number of windings as 64 for the central coil and 49 for the outer coils. Though Maxwell did not specifically state that current for the coils came from the same source, his work was specifically describing the construction of a sensitive galvanometer designed to detect a single current source. It follows that the ampere-turns for each of the smaller coils must be exactly of the turns of the larger.