The
cavity magnetron is a high-powered
vacuum tube that generates
microwaves using the interaction of a stream of
electrons with a
magnetic field while moving past a series of open metal cavities (
cavity resonators). Bunches of electrons passing by the openings to the cavities excite radio wave oscillations in the cavity, much as a guitar's strings excite sound in its sound box. The
frequency of the microwaves produced, the
resonant frequency, is determined by the cavities' physical dimensions. Unlike other microwave tubes, such as the
klystron and
traveling-wave tube (TWT), the magnetron cannot function as an
amplifier, increasing the power of an applied microwave signal; it serves solely as an
oscillator, generating a microwave signal from direct current power supplied to the tube.