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ferromagnetism

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How can it be regarded as a valuable strong magnet, and how to distinguish

How can it be regarded as a valuable strong magnet, and how to distinguish Now many people know that strong magnet is more valuable, but they are not very clear about what kind of strong magnet is, because there are many kinds of magnets, and some people ask whether it is strong magnet if the [...]

If a magnet keeps doing work, will its magnetism be weakened or even disappear?

If a magnet keeps doing work, will its magnetism be weakened or even disappear? There are many misconceptions about magnets and how they are magnetic. Since the magnetism of a magnet is invisible and intangible, it will be more abstract in the eyes of many people, and it is difficult to reflect it intuitively. First [...]

Magnetic Domains

Magnetic Domains In ferromagnetic materials, smaller groups of atoms band together into areas called domains, in which all the electrons have the same magnetic orientation. That's why you can magnetize them. See how it works in this tutorial. Electrons are teeny tiny magnets. They have a north and a south pole and spin around an [...]

What is Ferromagnetic Paper?

What is Ferromagnetic Paper? Ferromagnetic paper is formed by impregnating ordinary paper or newspaper with "magnetic nanoparticles". It can be used to make low-cost "micro-motors" for surgical instruments, tiny tweezers to study cells, tiny robots and tiny speakers. At present, the researching people will also ferromagnetic origami paper, to study more complicated design. Ferromagnetic paper [...]

The Difference Between Maximum Working Temperature and Curie Temperature of Magnet

The Difference Between Maximum Working Temperature and Curie Temperature of Magnet Maybe some people think the maximum working temperature of magnet is same as its Curie temperature. Actually, this is a mistake. The magnetic material can be divided into 5 kinds: ferromagnetism, ferrimagnetism, anti-ferromagnetism, paramagnetism, diamagnetism. Iron, Cobalt and Nickel are ferromagnetic material, also permanent [...]

Magnetic Anisotropy

Magnetic Anisotropy is the capacity of a magnet to maximize its magnetic orientation in the direction of its poles, and it is similar to general anisotropy of other material characteristics. Strong permanent magnets – especially sintered Neodymium magnets- have had their magnetic domains oriented in the direction of the easy axis to maximize their strength. [...]

World’s smallest magnetic data storage unit created

World's smallest magnetic data storage unit created, data storage magnets, the smallest magnets, ferromagnetism If you're impressed with how much data can be stored on your portable hard drive, well ... that's nothing. Scientists have now created a functioning magnetic data storage unit that measures just 4 by 16 nanometers, uses 12 atoms per bit, and can store an [...]

Ferromagnetism

Ferromagnetism, magnetic domains Looking back to the beginning of our thought experiment, magnetic fields may only be produced by a current. Taking the definition of current as a flow of electrons, electrons orbiting an atom should create a current and thus a magnetic field! If every atom has electrons is everything magnetic? YES! All matter, including [...]

September 30th, 2016|Magnetic Field, Magnetic Kownledge, Magnetism|

How does a permanent magnet work?

Permanent magnet work: Some materials have a feature known as ferromagnetism. The prefix "ferro" refers to Iron, which is one such material. Ferromagnetic materials have the ability to "remember" the magnetic fields they have been subjected to. An atom consists of a number of negatively charged electrons, orbiting around a positively charged nucleus. These electrons [...]

August 11th, 2016|Magnetic Kownledge, Magnetic Materials, Magnetism|

What Is Ferromagnetism?

Ferromagnetism Ferromagnetism is a property of a material in which particles called magnetic moments organize parallel to one another when there is a magnetic field. These particles remain in place even when the magnet is taken away. Magnetism occurs on an atomic level, with the field having a direct affect on the electrons [...]

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