Curie's Law
In a paramagnetic material the magnetization of the material is (approximately) directly proportional to an applied magnetic field. However, if the material is heated, this proportionality is reduced: for a fixed value of the field, the magnetization is (approximately) inversely proportional to temperature. This fact is encapsulated by Curie's law:
where
- is the resulting magnetisation
- is the magnetic field, measured in teslas
- is absolute temperature, measured in kelvins
- is a material-specific Curie constant.
This relation was discovered experimentally (by fitting the results to a correctly guessed model) by Pierre Curie. It only holds for high temperatures, or weak magnetic fields. As the derivations below show, the magnetization saturates in the opposite limit of low temperatures, or strong fields.
Read more about Curie's Law: Derivation With Quantum Statistical Mechanics, Derivation With Classical Statistical Mechanics, Applications
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“No law is sufficiently convenient to all.”
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