they cancel each other out.
The domains are still there, but they point every which way, so the net combined magnetic field of all of them no longer has any preferred direction.
A magnetic domain is a region of uniform magnetization within a material.
No, magnetic domains are a phenomenon that only occurs in ferromagnetic materials.
A magnet, or a magnetic domain.
Yes, that's the basic idea.
A magnetic domain refers to a region within a magnetic material that has uniform magnetization. Two materials with a weak magnetic domain are bismuth and pyrolytic carbon.
A Magnetic Domain is a cluster of billions of atoms that have magnetic fields lines up the same way.
magnetic fields of atoms aligning
If two materials have a weak magnetic domain then their lines of force will be sketched as farther apart. This is the convention for drawings of magnetic fields.
Each magnetic domain has a magnetic field. When an external magnetic field is applied, the magnetic domains will partially align, so the magnetic fields reinforce one another - instead of canceling one another, which is what happens when they are randomly distributed.
magnetic domain.
magnetic domains. itdescribes a region within a magnetic material which has uniform magnetization. This means that the individual magnetic moments of the atoms are aligned with one another and point in the same direction. Below a temperature called the Curie temperature, a piece of ferromagnetic material undergoes a phase transition and its magnetization spontaneously divides into many tiny magnetic domains, with their magnetic axes pointing in different directions. Magnetic domain structure is responsible for the magnetic behavior of ferromagnetic materials like iron. The regions separating magnetic domains are called domain walls where the magnetisation rotates coherently from the direction in one domain to that in the next domain.
A magnetic domain is a region of uniform magnetization within a material.
The domains are still there, but they point every which way, so the net combined magnetic field of all of them no longer has any preferred direction.
No, magnetic domains are a phenomenon that only occurs in ferromagnetic materials.
A magnet, or a magnetic domain.
A. P. Malozemoff has written: 'Magnetic domain walls in bubble materials' -- subject(s): Domain structure, Magnetic bubbles