When a material is unmagnetized, the domains are randomly oriented in different directions.
Magnetic domains are regions within a magnetic material where the magnetic moments of the atoms are aligned in the same direction. These domains can vary in size and orientation within the material. When the domains are aligned, the material exhibits magnetic properties.
The magnetic domains of an unmagnetized material will be pointing in random directions, which is why it is appearing to me unmagnetized. In a magnetized material, they move from north to south.
In a magnetized material, domains are aligned in the same direction, creating a net magnetic field. In an unmagnetized material, domains are randomly oriented, resulting in no net magnetic field. Magnetization involves reorienting these domains to align in a specific direction, leading to the material becoming magnetized.
The domains in a magnetic material is aligned unlike the non-magnetic material which is scattered
Domains in a material affect its magnetic properties by aligning the magnetic moments of the atoms within them. When a material is magnetized, the domains align to create a net magnetic field. The strength and orientation of these domains determine the overall magnetic behavior of the material.
Applying a magnetic field or heating the material above its Curie temperature can cause the realignment of magnetic domains in a material. Additionally, mechanical stress or impact can also influence the orientation of magnetic domains.
In a nonmagnetic material, the domains are random and do not align in any particular direction. This lack of alignment prevents the material from exhibiting magnetic properties.
The domains line up
ferromagnetic.
A magnet.
In non magnetized material the domains are not ordered -they do not align with one another.