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LEP 4.1.06 Current balance / Force acting on a current
LEP 4.1.06 Current balance / Force acting on a current

QUANTIZED MAGNETIC FLUX IN BOHR
QUANTIZED MAGNETIC FLUX IN BOHR

... field, these effects are here considered to be the result of the quantization of the magnetic flux through the atomic orbit in the case of a non-vanishing magnetic background field. Within the Bohr-Sommerfeld model two contributions (orbital motion and ’spin’) to the magnetic flux through the electr ...
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... become an electromagnet. Stronger electromagnets can be made using a solenoid with a magnetic material, such as iron, nickel, or cobalt, within the coil. The effect of this core material is to increase the strength of the magnetic field by aligning the electrons within the core material in such a wa ...
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... Especially for the classical electromagnetism theory system, which is a very typical phenomenological theory of physics system, has achieved great success and can explain a variety of electromagnetic phenomena. Nevertheless, we are only familiar with the principles, without knowing the exact reason ...
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Magnetic Flux Density (Cont`d)

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Analyzing Magnetic Fields with Solenoids - PhysicsEd

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... Ampere’s force law describes an “action at a distance” analogous to Coulomb’s law. In Coulomb’s law, it was useful to introduce the concept of an electric field to describe the interaction between the charges. In Ampere’s law, we can define an appropriate field that may be regarded as the means by w ...
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... F: Attitudes in Science Research: You have experimented with magnets in class, but scientist sometime need to use very powerful magnets. But a powerful magnet has a problem, how can the magnet be turned off and on? In 1820, a Danish physicist Hans Christian Oersted, discovered that there was a relat ...
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... Ampere’s force law describes an “action at a distance” analogous to Coulomb’s law. In Coulomb’s law, it was useful to introduce the concept of an electric field to describe the interaction between the charges. In Ampere’s law, we can define an appropriate field that may be regarded as the means by w ...
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Experiment: Testing A Variety of Objects for Magnetic Attraction

... It is known that the Vikings used a lodestone to navigate. Later at the end twelfth century Europeans were using this simple compass to aid navigation. During the 16th century Sir William Gilbert discovered that the properties lodestone could be transferred to ordinary pieces of iron by rubbing them ...
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... using low-energy electron beams that strike a fluorescent mesh. The images are recorded with a CCD camera and show no observable evidence of island structures inside the separatrix. The experimental determination of the rotational transform agrees with numerical calculations to within 1%. A simple a ...
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Magnetic nanoparticles

Magnetic nanoparticles are a class of nanoparticle which can be manipulated using magnetic field gradients. Such particles commonly consist of magnetic elements such as iron, nickel and cobalt and their chemical compounds. While nanoparticles are smaller than 1 micrometer in diameter (typically 5–500 nanometers), the larger microbeads are 0.5–500 micrometer in diameter. Magnetic nanoparticle clusters which are composed of a number of individual magnetic nanoparticles are known as magnetic nanobeads with a diameter of 50–200 nanometers. The magnetic nanoparticles have been the focus of much research recently because they possess attractive properties which could see potential use in catalysis including nanomaterial-based catalysts, biomedicine and tissue specific targeting, magnetically tunable colloidal photonic crystals, microfluidics, magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic particle imaging, data storage, environmental remediation, nanofluids, and optical filters, defect sensor and cation sensors.
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