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magnetilised

Magnetised is the condition of an object that has been endowed with a net magnetic moment, typically by exposure to an external magnetic field or electric current. In physics, magnetization is described by a vector field M, representing the magnetic moment per unit volume. When a material is magnetised, its magnetic domains—small regions with aligned moments—tend to align with the external field. If the alignment persists after the field is removed, the material is a permanent magnet; if it largely disappears, the material is a soft magnet or paramagnetic or diamagnetic depending on response.

Permanent magnetisation occurs in ferromagnetic or ferrimagnetic materials, such as iron, nickel, cobalt, and their alloys,

Methods to magnetise include exposing the material to a strong magnetic field, placing it inside an electromagnet,

Applications of magnetised objects include compasses, data storage, electric machines, magnetic separation, and medical imaging. The

due
to
interactions
at
the
atomic
level
that
produce
high
remanent
magnetization.
Induced
magnetisation
happens
in
most
materials
in
the
presence
of
a
magnetic
field,
but
may
vanish
when
the
field
is
removed.
Soft
magnetic
materials
are
easily
magnetised
and
demagnetised,
making
them
useful
in
transformers
and
magnetic
cores.
or
passing
high
currents
through
coils.
Demagnetisation
can
occur
through
heat,
strong
opposing
fields,
or
mechanical
shocks,
and
is
influenced
by
coercivity
and
magnetic
anisotropy.
term
magnetised
follows
British
spelling;
magnetized
is
the
American
variant.