http://ediss.sub.uni-hamburg.de/volltexte/2009/4133/pdf/Andre_Diss-00_Main_final.pdf

When the temperature of magnetic metals gets above the Curie temperature,
their magnetic nature changes in state to the formation of magnetic vortex
nano-domains.




On Sun, Feb 9, 2014 at 1:06 PM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

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> 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.
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> That would probably be the limit - and it is far from infinite... OTHO it is
> provocative in the context of spin coupling.
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> *From:* Bob Higgins
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> 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.
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> Axil Axil wrote:
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> There is no limit on the strength of a magnetic field.
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