Physics, asked by kaverirajan25, 5 months ago

Domain theory of ferromagnetism​

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Answered by nayakdebi
1

Answer:

In 1907, Weiss proposed domain theory to explain ferromagnetism. According to this theory, a single crystal of ferromagnetic solid compresses a large number of small regions, and each region is spontaneously magnetized to saturation extent called a domain.

Answered by JaiShreeRadhaKrishna
0

Answer:

In 1907, Weiss proposed domain theory to explain ferromagnetism. According to this theory, a single crystal of ferromagnetic solid compresses a large number of small regions, and each region is spontaneously magnetized to saturation extent called a domain.

Explanation:- (☞ ಠ_ಠ)☞(☞゚∀゚)☞

Weiss proposed a concept of ferromagnetic domains. According to his postulate neighboring atoms of the ferromagnetic materials due to interactions from several number of very regions. Those regions were called domains. His theory is also named as domain theory of ferromagnetism.

Weiss proposed a concept of ferromagnetic domains. According to his postulate neighboring atoms of the ferromagnetic materials due to interactions from several number of very regions. Those regions were called domains. His theory is also named as domain theory of ferromagnetism.The domains are aligned along the direction of the applied magnetic field grow in size that is they align opposite to the field direction which gets reduced. In the presence of a weak external field, the magnetization in the material occurs mostly by the process of domain growing. In the presence of a strong magnetic field, the material gets magnetized by the process of alignment. When the field is removed the boundaries of domain do not recover their original position and the material is not completely demagnetized but some magnetism still remains.

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