Yes, there is a limit in the case of atoms (without getting into nuclear
magnetics). In a number of papers, Dennis Letts recognized the possibility
that the internal magnetic field for hydrogen, in particular - would be much
stronger than an external field which could align it - on the order of 12.5
Tesla for hydrogen.

 

That would probably be the limit - and it is far from infinite. OTHO it is
provocative in the context of spin coupling.

 

 

From: Bob Higgins 

 

Just like the Earth's gravity doesn't become infinite as you approach the
Earth's center of mass. As you start approaching the sources, or are
surrounded by them, the field will depend on the inverse square to each of
the sources.  It becomes a distributed source calculation.

 

Axil Axil wrote:

 

There is no limit on the strength of a magnetic field.

 

 

 

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