ferromagnet

(noun)

Materials that show a permanent magnetic property.

Related Terms

  • inductor
  • permeability

Examples of ferromagnet in the following topics:

  • Ferromagnetism

    • Ferromagnetism is the property of certain materials that enables them to form magnets and be attracted to magnets.
    • An everyday example of ferromagnetism is a refrigerator magnet used to hold notes on a refrigerator door.
    • Domains are small and randomly oriented in an unmagnetized ferromagnetic object.
    • Thus ferromagnetism only occurs in materials with partially filled shells.
    • Such materials are called ferromagnetic, after the Latin word for iron, ferrum.
  • Ferromagnets and Electromagnets

    • Such magnets are called ferromagnets.
    • These materials are called ferromagnetic, after the Latin word ferrum (iron).
    • In an unmagnetized ferromagnetic object, domains are small and randomly oriented.
    • Due to the high magnetic permeability μ of the ferromagnetic material, the ferromagnetic core increases the magnetic field to thousands of times the strength of the field of the coil alone.
    • This is called a ferromagnetic-core or iron-core electromagnet.
  • Permanent Magnets

    • Permanent magnets are objects made from ferromagnetic material that produce a persistent magnetic field.
    • Materials that can be magnetized, which are also the ones that are strongly attracted to a magnet, are called ferromagnetic.
    • When a magnet is brought near a previously unmagnetized ferromagnetic material, it causes local magnetization of the material with unlike poles closest .
    • However, before magnetization these regions are small and randomly oriented throughout the unmagnetized ferromagnetic objects, so there is no net magnetic field.
    • This arrangement can become permanent when the ferromagnetic material is heated and then cooled.
  • Solenoids, Current Loops, and Electromagnets

    • Combining a ferromagnet with an electromagnet can produce particularly strong magnetic effects.
    • Whenever strong magnetic effects are needed (such as lifting scrap metal, or in particle accelerators) electromagnets are enhanced by ferromagnetic materials.
    • Currents, including those associated with other submicroscopic particles like protons, allow us to explain ferromagnetism and all other magnetic effects.
    • Ferromagnetism, for example, results from an internal cooperative alignment of electron spins, possible in some materials but not in others.
    • An electromagnet induces regions of permanent magnetism on a floppy disk coated with a ferromagnetic material.
  • Paramagnetism and Diamagnetism

    • Unlike ferromagnets, paramagnets do not retain any magnetization in the absence of an externally applied magnetic field, because thermal motion randomizes the spin orientations responsible for magnetism.
    • However, for materials that display some other form of magnetism (such as ferromagnetism or paramagnetism), the diamagnetic contribution becomes negligible.
  • Transformers

    • A typical construction of a simple transformer has two coils wound on a ferromagnetic core that is laminated to minimize eddy currents.
    • Any change in current in the primary induces a current in the secondary.The figure shows a simple transformer with two coils wound on either sides of a laminated ferromagnetic core.
  • Energy in a Magnetic Field

    • For hysteretic materials such as ferromagnets and superconductors, the work needed also depends on how the magnetic field is created.
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