Lets say you have an uniform prism magnet of Iron for example. How would you calculate the demagneti

Jay Barrett

Jay Barrett

Answered question

2022-05-07

Lets say you have an uniform prism magnet of Iron for example. How would you calculate the demagnetization field H which the bar magnet produces? As I understand, first you need the magnetization M which is the magnetic moments per volumen. But then what ? Or would you apply and external field to the bar magnet and see how it reacts, if this is the case, how does this work ?

Answer & Explanation

Cristal Obrien

Cristal Obrien

Beginner2022-05-08Added 16 answers

If you know M then H is just M χ m where χ m is the magnetic susceptibility. This only holds for paramagnets and diamagnets, however. In the case of a ferromagnetic material like iron, you would have to refer to the hysteresis curve. If you know the net (= applied+induced) magnetic field B in the material, then you can use any of these relations
H = B n e t μ H = B a p p l i e d μ 0 H = B n e t μ 0 M H = B a p p l i e d + μ 0 M μ ( B i n d u c e d = μ 0 M )
where μ =permeability.

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