When you think of magnetism the chances are that you’re only thinking of one type of magnetism: ferromagnetism. But there are two other types of magnetism: paramagnetism and diamagnetism, that are less well known.
Ferromagnetism is the only type of magnetism that produces forces large enough to be easily felt, and ferromagnetic materials are the only ones that demonstrate spontaneous magnetism – magnetism outside of an applied magnetic field. The most common ferromagnetic materials are those that contain iron, cobalt and nickel but other elements such as dysprosium and gadolinium and compounds such as chromium oxide and manganese bismide also demonstrate ferromagnetic properties.
Paramagnetic and diamagnetic effects only exist in the presence of an applied magnetic field: paramagnetic materials such as tungsten and aluminium create an attractive force when exposed to magnetic fields and diamagnetic materials such as pyrolytic carbon and mercury create a repulsive one.
A small sheet of pyrolytic carbon levitates above an array of neodymium-iron-boron magnets.
Water is weakly diamagnetic, about forty times less diamagnetic than the pyrolytic carbon shown above, but this is enough that light objects which contain a large amount of water can be levitated if placed in a very strong magnetic field.
This frog was levitated using a 16 tesla Bitter electromagnet at the High Field Magnetic Laboratory at the Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands.
Oh ya yhanks 4 dis I dus got brains .tit may bee usefull, …i’m smarter than i appear
It was sort of helpful but include more details people!!!!!!
thanks you really helped with my question
Could you please include curie temperature and susceptibilty terms for para and diamagnetism…..its too messy for me to understand
shing kumetaryuzz
I may be too late on this, but for those of you after a few more details, take a look at this document…
http://web.hep.uiuc.edu/home/serrede/P435/Lecture_Notes/Magnetism.pdf
what are the types of theory in magnetism ?
reply please for my subject thank you
My cousin has been thinking about getting some magnets so that he can have a lot more fun with different projects and work better. He would really like to get some help from a professional so that he can do a lot more work and have the right materials to test with. I liked what you said about how water is weakly diamagnetic but items that contain a small amount of water can be levitated when placed in a strong magnetic field.