Environmental Magnetic Susceptibility Using the Bartington MS2 System - John Dearing BARTINGTON INSTRUMENTS
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Magnetism, Magnetic Properties, Magnetochemistry
Magnetism, Magnetic Properties, Magnetochemistry 1 Magnetism All matter is electronic Positive/negative charges - bound by Coulombic forces Result of electric field E between charges, electric dipole Electric and magnetic fields = the electromagnetic interaction (Oersted, Maxwell) Electric field = electric +/ charges, electric dipole Magnetic field ??No source?? No magnetic charges, N-S No magnetic monopole Magnetic field = motion of electric charges (electric current, atomic motions) Magnetic dipole – magnetic moment = i A [A m2] 2 Electromagnetic Fields 3 Magnetism Magnetic field = motion of electric charges • Macro - electric current • Micro - spin + orbital momentum Ampère 1822 Poisson model Magnetic dipole – magnetic (dipole) moment [A m2] i A 4 Ampere model Magnetism Microscopic explanation of source of magnetism = Fundamental quantum magnets Unpaired electrons = spins (Bohr 1913) Atomic building blocks (protons, neutrons and electrons = fermions) possess an intrinsic magnetic moment Relativistic quantum theory (P. Dirac 1928) SPIN (quantum property ~ rotation of charged particles) Spin (½ for all fermions) gives rise to a magnetic moment 5 Atomic Motions of Electric Charges The origins for the magnetic moment of a free atom Motions of Electric Charges: 1) The spins of the electrons S. Unpaired spins give a paramagnetic contribution. Paired spins give a diamagnetic contribution. 2) The orbital angular momentum L of the electrons about the nucleus, degenerate orbitals, paramagnetic contribution. The change in the orbital moment -
(Public Pack)Agenda Document for Health & Wellbeing Board, 11/12/2018 17:30
Public Document Pack Health & Wellbeing Board Tuesday, 11th December, 2018 5.30 pm AGENDA 1. Welcome and Apologies 2. Minutes of the Meeting Held on 25th September 2018 Minutes 25th September 2018 3 - 8 3. Declarations of Interest 4. Public Questions To receive a Letter from Kate Davies OBE, Director of Health & Justice, Armed Forces and Sexual Assault services Commissioning, and Jackie Doyle-Price MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary FAO Chairs of Health and Wellbeing Boards 9 - 11 5. Start Well Annual Update (Jayne Ivory) 6. Pan Lancashire Health and Wellbeing Board (Dominic Harrison) 7. Joint Commissioning and Better Care Fund Update (Sayyed Osman) Joint Commissioning and Better Care Fund Update 12 - 17 8. Joint Strategic Needs Assessment Summary Review (Anne Cunningham) HWBB - JSNA Summary Review paper 18 - 73 Summary Review 2018 9. Action on Air Quality (Dominic Harrison) Air Quality for HWB 11th December 74 - 103 Air Quality and Public Health Report FINAL(2) Appendix 1 Appendix 2 L&C Air Quality Summit for HWB 10. Health and Wealth Report (Dominic Harrison) Health for Wealth (2018) NHSA-REPORT-7pages 104 - 110 Date Published: 4th December 2018 Harry Catherall, Chief Executive Agenda Item 2 BLACKBURN WITH DARWEN HEALTH AND WELLBEING BOARD MINUTES OF A MEETING HELD ON TUESDAY, 25TH SEPTEMBER 2018 PRESENT: Mohammed Khan (Chair) Councillors Maureen Bateson Brian Taylor Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) Roger Parr Lay Members Joe Slater Vicky Shepherd Voluntary Sector Angela Allen Healthwatch Abdul Mulla Sayyed Osman Dominic Harrison Kenneth Barnsley Council Rabiya Gangreker Wendi Shepherd Jayne Ivory Council Officers Firoza Hafeji CCG Officers Dr Penny Morris Midland and Lancashire Commissioning Nicola Feeney Support Unit 1. -
Magnetism Some Basics: a Magnet Is Associated with Magnetic Lines of Force, and a North Pole and a South Pole
Materials 100A, Class 15, Magnetic Properties I Ram Seshadri MRL 2031, x6129 [email protected]; http://www.mrl.ucsb.edu/∼seshadri/teach.html Magnetism Some basics: A magnet is associated with magnetic lines of force, and a north pole and a south pole. The lines of force come out of the north pole (the source) and are pulled in to the south pole (the sink). A current in a ring or coil also produces magnetic lines of force. N S The magnetic dipole (a north-south pair) is usually represented by an arrow. Magnetic fields act on these dipoles and tend to align them. The magnetic field strength H generated by N closely spaced turns in a coil of wire carrying a current I, for a coil length of l is given by: NI H = l The units of H are amp`eres per meter (Am−1) in SI units or oersted (Oe) in CGS. 1 Am−1 = 4π × 10−3 Oe. If a coil (or solenoid) encloses a vacuum, then the magnetic flux density B generated by a field strength H from the solenoid is given by B = µ0H −7 where µ0 is the vacuum permeability. In SI units, µ0 = 4π × 10 H/m. If the solenoid encloses a medium of permeability µ (instead of the vacuum), then the magnetic flux density is given by: B = µH and µ = µrµ0 µr is the relative permeability. Materials respond to a magnetic field by developing a magnetization M which is the number of magnetic dipoles per unit volume. The magnetization is obtained from: B = µ0H + µ0M The second term, µ0M is reflective of how certain materials can actually concentrate or repel the magnetic field lines. -
Diamagnetism of Bulk Graphite Revised
magnetochemistry Article Diamagnetism of Bulk Graphite Revised Bogdan Semenenko and Pablo D. Esquinazi * Division of Superconductivity and Magnetism, Felix-Bloch-Institute for Solid State Physics, Faculty of Physics and Earth Sciences, University of Leipzig, Linnéstraße 5, 04103 Leipzig, Germany; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +49-341-97-32-751 Received: 15 October 2018; Accepted: 16 November 2018; Published: 22 November 2018 Abstract: Recently published structural analysis and galvanomagnetic studies of a large number of different bulk and mesoscopic graphite samples of high quality and purity reveal that the common picture assuming graphite samples as a semimetal with a homogeneous carrier density of conduction electrons is misleading. These new studies indicate that the main electrical conduction path occurs within 2D interfaces embedded in semiconducting Bernal and/or rhombohedral stacking regions. This new knowledge incites us to revise experimentally and theoretically the diamagnetism of graphite samples. We found that the c-axis susceptibility of highly pure oriented graphite samples is not really constant, but can vary several tens of percent for bulk samples with thickness t & 30 µm, whereas by a much larger factor for samples with a smaller thickness. The observed decrease of the susceptibility with sample thickness qualitatively resembles the one reported for the electrical conductivity and indicates that the main part of the c-axis diamagnetic signal is not intrinsic to the ideal graphite structure, but it is due to the highly conducting 2D interfaces. The interpretation of the main diamagnetic signal of graphite agrees with the reported description of its galvanomagnetic properties and provides a hint to understand some magnetic peculiarities of thin graphite samples. -
Magnetic Susceptibility Artefact on MRI Mimicking Lymphadenopathy: Description of a Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Patient
1161 Case Report on Focused Issue on Translational Imaging in Cancer Patient Care Magnetic susceptibility artefact on MRI mimicking lymphadenopathy: description of a nasopharyngeal carcinoma patient Feng Zhao1, Xiaokai Yu1, Jiayan Shen1, Xinke Li1, Guorong Yao1, Xiaoli Sun1, Fang Wang1, Hua Zhou2, Zhongjie Lu1, Senxiang Yan1 1Department of Radiation Oncology, 2Department of Radiology, the First Affiliated Hospital, College of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310003, China Correspondence to: Zhongjie Lu. Department of Radiation Oncology, the First Affiliated Hospital, College of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310003, China. Email: [email protected]; Senxiang Yan. Department of Radiation Oncology, the First Affiliated Hospital, College of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310003, China. Email: [email protected]. Abstract: This report describes a case involving a 34-year-old male patient with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) who exhibited the manifestation of lymph node enlargement on magnetic resonance (MR) images due to a magnetic susceptibility artefact (MSA). Initial axial T1-weighted and T2-weighted images acquired before treatment showed a round nodule with hyperintensity in the left retropharyngeal space that mimicked an enlarged cervical lymph node. However, coronal T2-weighted images and subsequent computed tomography (CT) images indicated that this lymph node-like lesion was an MSA caused by the air-bone tissue interface rather than an actual lymph node or another artefact. In addition, for the subsequent MR imaging (MRI), which was performed after chemoradiotherapy (CRT) treatment for NPC, axial MR images also showed an enlarged lymph node-like lesion. This MSA was not observed in a follow-up MRI examination when different MR sequences were used. -
Magnetism in Transition Metal Complexes
Magnetism for Chemists I. Introduction to Magnetism II. Survey of Magnetic Behavior III. Van Vleck’s Equation III. Applications A. Complexed ions and SOC B. Inter-Atomic Magnetic “Exchange” Interactions © 2012, K.S. Suslick Magnetism Intro 1. Magnetic properties depend on # of unpaired e- and how they interact with one another. 2. Magnetic susceptibility measures ease of alignment of electron spins in an external magnetic field . 3. Magnetic response of e- to an external magnetic field ~ 1000 times that of even the most magnetic nuclei. 4. Best definition of a magnet: a solid in which more electrons point in one direction than in any other direction © 2012, K.S. Suslick 1 Uses of Magnetic Susceptibility 1. Determine # of unpaired e- 2. Magnitude of Spin-Orbit Coupling. 3. Thermal populations of low lying excited states (e.g., spin-crossover complexes). 4. Intra- and Inter- Molecular magnetic exchange interactions. © 2012, K.S. Suslick Response to a Magnetic Field • For a given Hexternal, the magnetic field in the material is B B = Magnetic Induction (tesla) inside the material current I • Magnetic susceptibility, (dimensionless) B > 0 measures the vacuum = 0 material response < 0 relative to a vacuum. H © 2012, K.S. Suslick 2 Magnetic field definitions B – magnetic induction Two quantities H – magnetic intensity describing a magnetic field (Système Internationale, SI) In vacuum: B = µ0H -7 -2 µ0 = 4π · 10 N A - the permeability of free space (the permeability constant) B = H (cgs: centimeter, gram, second) © 2012, K.S. Suslick Magnetism: Definitions The magnetic field inside a substance differs from the free- space value of the applied field: → → → H = H0 + ∆H inside sample applied field shielding/deshielding due to induced internal field Usually, this equation is rewritten as (physicists use B for H): → → → B = H0 + 4 π M magnetic induction magnetization (mag. -
Magnetic Mineral Assemblages in Soils and Paleosols As the Basis for Paleoprecipitation Proxies: a Review of Magnetic Methods and Challenges
Earth-Science Reviews 155 (2016) 28–48 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Earth-Science Reviews journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/earscirev Magnetic mineral assemblages in soils and paleosols as the basis for paleoprecipitation proxies: A review of magnetic methods and challenges Daniel P. Maxbauer a,b,⁎, Joshua M. Feinberg a,b, David L. Fox a a Department of Earth Sciences, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States b Institute for Rock Magnetism, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States article info abstract Article history: Magnetic iron oxide minerals, principally magnetite, maghemite, hematite, and goethite are formed in well- Received 10 August 2015 drained soils in response to a suite of physical, chemical, and biological factors. Despite a wide range of complex- Received in revised form 11 January 2016 ity in the pedogenic processes that lead to magnetic mineral formation, dissolution, and transformation, there are Accepted 26 January 2016 well-documented empirical relationships between various magnetic mineral assemblages in soils with environ- Available online 27 January 2016 mental and climatic conditions. Recently there has been an increase in the number of quantitative magnetic Keywords: paleoprecipitation proxies that have been developed, and there is great potential for magnetic methods to be Paleoprecipitation used in the geologic record to develop reconstructions of past climates. Magnetic paleoprecipitation proxies Proxy have been widely utilized in Quaternary or younger loess–paleosol systems; however, they have yet to be utilized Soil magnetism in the pre-Quaternary fossil record. Future studies of magnetic mineralogy of soils and paleosols should aim to Paleosols explore non-loessic modern soils and pre-Quaternary paleosols with more focus on understanding the interac- Iron oxides tion between magnetic mineral assemblages and soil moisture. -
The Effects of Ultrafine Air Pollution Particles on Health” Session with Barbara Maher
11/19 RAPPORTEURSHIPS “FACING CLIMATE CHANGE” “THE EFFECTS OF ULTRAFINE AIR POLLUTION PARTICLES ON HEALTH” SESSION WITH BARBARA MAHER. 7th November 2019- Barbara Maher 11th session – Re-City: Facing Climate Change The effects of ultrafine air pollution particles on health Invited speaker: Barbara Maher, Lancaster University ______________________________________________________________________________ CONTENTS Biography 3 Summary 5 Nanoparticles are a threat to public health 5 Air pollution nanoparticles contribute to neurodegenerative diseases 5 Electric cars and green barriers to reduce pollution. 6 The effects of ultrafine air pollution particles on health 7 Airborne Particulate Matter 7 Ultrafine air pollution and the human brain 8 Location affects exposure 10 Potential solutions for reducing exposure to air pollution 11 You cannot manage what you do not measure 11 Roadside tree lines for reducing exposure to PM - The silver-birch tree experiment 13 Public transport 14 Filters to reduce air pollution 14 Raising awareness 14 Concluding remarks 15 References 15 1 7th November 2019- Barbara Maher 11th session – Re-City: Facing Climate Change This report is a synthesis of the debate with Dr. Barbara Maher in the conference series “Facing climate change”, organised by the Catalunya Europa Foundation as part of the Re-City project, in collaboration with BBVA. This session, entitled "The effects of ultrafine air pollution particles on health” consisted of a public lecture, a lunch-debate that brought together actors from the economic, social, political and business sector of Catalonia, and a meeting with academics. The activities were held in Barcelona at the Antoni Tàpies Foundation in November 2019. The content order along this report is thematic and does not represent the order in which it was presented by Dr. -
5 Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism
5 Geomagnetism and paleomagnetism It is not known when the directive power of the magnet 5.1 HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION - its ability to align consistently north-south - was first recognized. Early in the Han dynasty, between 300 and 5.1.1 The discovery of magnetism 200 BC, the Chinese fashioned a rudimentary compass Mankind's interest in magnetism began as a fascination out of lodestone. It consisted of a spoon-shaped object, with the curious attractive properties of the mineral lode whose bowl balanced and could rotate on a flat polished stone, a naturally occurring form of magnetite. Called surface. This compass may have been used in the search loadstone in early usage, the name derives from the old for gems and in the selection of sites for houses. Before English word load, meaning "way" or "course"; the load 1000 AD the Chinese had developed suspended and stone was literally a stone which showed a traveller the pivoted-needle compasses. Their directive power led to the way. use of compasses for navigation long before the origin of The earliest observations of magnetism were made the aligning forces was understood. As late as the twelfth before accurate records of discoveries were kept, so that century, it was supposed in Europe that the alignment of it is impossible to be sure of historical precedents. the compass arose from its attempt to follow the pole star. Nevertheless, Greek philosophers wrote about lodestone It was later shown that the compass alignment was pro around 800 BC and its properties were known to the duced by a property of the Earth itself. -
Divergent Drivers of Carbon Dioxide and Methane Dynamics in an Agricultural Coastal Floodplain: Post-Flood Hydrological and Biological Drivers
ResearchOnline@JCU This is the author-created version of the following work: Webb, Jackie R., Santos, Isaac R., Tait, Douglas R., Sippo, James Z., Macdonald, Ben C.T., Robson, Barbara, Maher, Damien T., and UNSPECIFIED (2016) Divergent drivers of carbon dioxide and methane dynamics in an agricultural coastal floodplain: post-flood hydrological and biological drivers. Chemical Geology, 440 pp. 313-325. Access to this file is available from: https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/58052/ © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Accepted Version: © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Please refer to the original source for the final version of this work: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2016.07.025 ÔØ ÅÒÙ×Ö ÔØ Divergent drivers of carbon dioxide and methane dynamics in an agricultural coastal floodplain: post-flood hydrological and biological drivers Jackie R. Webb, Isaac R. Santos, Douglas R. Tait, James Z. Sippo, Ben C.T. Macdonald, Barbara Robson, Damien T. Maher PII: S0009-2541(16)30377-1 DOI: doi: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2016.07.025 Reference: CHEMGE 18014 To appear in: Chemical Geology Received date: 24 March 2016 Revised date: 22 July 2016 Accepted date: 31 July 2016 Please cite this article as: Webb, Jackie R., Santos, Isaac R., Tait, Douglas R., Sippo, James Z., Macdonald, Ben C.T., Robson, Barbara, Maher, Damien T., Diver- gent drivers of carbon dioxide and methane dynamics in an agricultural coastal flood- plain: post-flood hydrological and biological drivers, Chemical Geology (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2016.07.025 This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. -
A Liveable and Low-Carbon City
A liveable and low-carbon city Chapter 5: A liveable and low-carbon city Strategic overview The Our Manchester Strategy sets out a clear We’re working with partners and communities ambition for Manchester to become a liveable to reduce the amount of crime and antisocial The future success of Manchester is inextricably and low-carbon city by playing a full part in behaviour in the city, to provide safer, clean, tied to whether it is a great place to live. This limiting the impacts of climate change and attractive and cohesive neighbourhoods. chapter will: being on a path to being zero-carbon by 2050. Manchester is growing and becoming ever → Provide an overview on how well the Council In 2018, this target was revised with a more more diverse. We are a welcoming city, and is achieving its ambition by assessing the challenging ambition to becoming zero- residents have a proud track record of positive progress made in delivering a diverse supply carbon by 2038. Other environmental factors integration and respecting one another’s of high-quality housing in clean, safe, also remain a priority for the city. These cultures, faiths and ways of life. attractive and cohesive neighbourhoods include developing our green infrastructure, repurposing our contaminated land (a by- This helps to secure Manchester’s position as → Look at the work we are doing to improve product of our industrial heritage), improving a liveable city, providing a richness of cultural, air quality in the city air quality, increasing recycling and reducing leisure and sports facilities, and offering many → Look at how we are protecting the city for the amount of waste that goes to landfill, opportunities for people to engage with their future generations through encouraging making sure our streets are clean and litter- communities and neighbourhoods through the growth of a low-carbon culture, and free, and reducing the amount of fly-tipping. -
Cutbank Geophysics
Article Cutbank Geophysics: A New Method for Expanding Magnetic Investigations to the Subsurface Using Magnetic Susceptibility Testing at an Awatixa Hidatsa Village, North Dakota Rinita Dalan 1,*, Jay Sturdevant 2, Rebecca Wallace 3, Blair Schneider 4 and Steven De Vore 2 1 Department of Anthropology and Earth Science, Minnesota State University Moorhead, 1104 7th Avenue South, Moorhead, MN 56563, USA 2 National Park Service, Midwest Archeological Center, 100 Centennial Mall, North, Room 474, Lincoln, NE 68508, USA; [email protected] (J.S.); [email protected] (S.D.V.) 3 Metcalf Archaeological Consultants, PO Box 2154, Bismarck, ND 58502, USA; [email protected] 4 Department of Geology, University of Kansas, 1475 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045, USA; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +1‐218‐477‐5900 Academic Editors: Kenneth L. Kvamme, Xiaofeng Li, Richard Müller, Richard Gloaguen and Prasad S. Thenkabail Received: 30 September 2016; Accepted: 20 January 2017; Published: 28 January 2017 Abstract: Magnetic susceptibility investigations were conducted at an Awatixa Hidatsa village (32ME11, also known as Sakakawea Village) along a cutbank at the Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site (KNRI) in central North Dakota, USA. This extensive exposure provided a superb opportunity to correlate magnetic susceptibility measurements with a variety of subsurface features. These features were visible in the cutbank, and also recorded in cutbank profiles completed in the late 1970s in work supervised by Robert Nickel and Stanley Ahler. The susceptibility studies are part of a larger program of geophysics at KNRI that commenced with pioneering surveys of John Weymouth and Robert Nickel, also in the 1970s, and continued with extensive surface‐based magnetic surveys over the interior portion of the site in 2012 by the National Park Service.