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magnet question


JayUK

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no, no copper, there are only 3 metals that are naturally ferromagnetic, and those are the ones I listed.

 

unless you`re thinking of applying the inverse square law in which case a piece of Plastic will suffice.

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no, no copper, there are only 3 metals that are naturally ferromagnetic, and those are the ones I listed.

 

unless you`re thinking of applying the inverse square law in which case a piece of Plastic will suffice.

 

then maybe Im not understanding.

doesnt he want something that reducing the magnetic attraction?

 

isnt ferromagnetism just another word for magnetism?

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not quite no, a ferromagnetic material will enable Flux Return (as Swansont pointed out), the Other method as I said is to invoke the inverse square rule.

 

and short of damaging the magnet itself (impact or heating) on a perm basis, these are the only 2 Viable option open.

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not quite no, a ferromagnetic material will enable Flux Return (as Swansont pointed out), the Other method as I said is to invoke the inverse square rule.

 

and short of damaging the magnet itself (impact or heating) on a perm basis, these are the only 2 Viable option open.

 

ahh ok.

 

thanks :)

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  • 4 weeks later...

Your not going to get a magnet with 1 pole if you attach a piece of metal to the other. I think by your first post this is what you where getting at. Also the whole magnet attracts, both ends attract metals most and the north attracts the south of another magnet and vice versa. Same poles repel.

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"there are only 3 metals that are naturally ferromagnetic"

these 3 are Fe, Ni, Co, Gd and (I'm told) Pu.

 

I don't know about Pu — I don't find anything confirming that — but Gd's Curie point is 293 K, so as long as YT likes his room warm enough, the math works.

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I don't plan to test Pu but my lump of gadolinium is clearly magnetic- you can pick it up with a magnet. It's quite a nice warm day here, definitely over 293K. It would be ridiculously expensive compared to steel, but you could use it to screen a magnetic field.

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I don't plan to test Pu but my lump of gadolinium is clearly magnetic- you can pick it up with a magnet. It's quite a nice warm day here, definitely over 293K. It would be ridiculously expensive compared to steel, but you could use it to screen a magnetic field.

 

Gadolinium is paramagnetic above the Curie temperature.

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no, it isn`t ferromagnetic.

it needs to be either Iron, Nickel or Cobalt based (as the free metal not a compound), a mixture will work though.

 

This doesn't really help answer the question, but -

JayUK, notice the word ferromagnetic. Ferro, means iron in Italian (and I suppose also Latin), which is where Fe came from, as the element's symbol.

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