No
A cluster of billions of atoms that all have magnetic fields lined up in the same way is known as a ferromagnetic material. This alignment creates a strong magnetic field within the material, making it magnetically responsive.
Magnetic domains are tiny regions within materials where atoms align their magnetic fields in the same direction. When these domains line up, the material exhibits magnetic properties.
A transverse wave consisting of changing electric fields and changing magnetic fields
A uniform magnetic field is a magnetic field that has the same strength and direction at all points in a given region of space. It has constant magnetic flux density and does not vary in magnitude or direction within the specified area. Uniform magnetic fields are often used in scientific experiments and applications to provide consistent and predictable conditions for studying magnetic effects.
They do but it in the external magnetic field. In order for material to have magnetic properties without any fields it should be ferromagnetic. In paramagnetic all spins are pointed in the same direction. In diamagnetic spins are oriented randomly it vanishes the effect.
A cluster of billions of atoms that all have magnetic fields lined up in the same way is known as a ferromagnetic material. This alignment creates a strong magnetic field within the material, making it magnetically responsive.
Magnetic domains are tiny regions within materials where atoms align their magnetic fields in the same direction. When these domains line up, the material exhibits magnetic properties.
yes all the other planets have magnetic fields except venus because it rotates to slowly
yes
A uniform magnetic field has the same strength and direction at all points in space. In contrast, a non-uniform magnetic field is one where the strength and/or direction varies from point to point. Uniform magnetic fields are often created in laboratory settings, while non-uniform magnetic fields can occur naturally or in more complex magnetic systems.
The "lines" of latitude, longitude, reasoning, electric fields, and magnetic fields are imaginary.
All planets have magnetic fields. I believe that in most cases, this magnetic field can act as a shield.
Yes, a grain-oriented form of iron called mu-metal is used as a screen of magnetic fields for such things as CRT's. This material has a high magnetic permeability, called mu (the Greek letter) in the trade, hence mu-metal. Effectively it 'short circuits' a magnetic field. A double screened cage called a Faraday Cage does the same function for electromagnetic fields.
No, not all force fields can attract and repel. Some force fields, like magnetic fields, can both attract and repel objects with opposite magnetic polarity, while others, like gravitational fields, only attract objects and cannot repel them.
from the designs and the room available to make the stadium.
The source of all magnetic fields is moving electric charge: whether it is current in a wire, unpaired electrons in an atomic orbital, convection currents in the earth's liquid nickle/iron core, plasma in the sun, etc. moving electric charge is the source of all magnetic fields.
Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter, and Earth all have magnetic fields. Mercury has a very weak magnetic field.