- Magnalia Christi Americana (work by Mather)
Cotton Mather: His magnum opus was Magnalia Christi Americana (1702), an ecclesiastical history of America from the founding of New England to his own time. His Manuductio ad Ministerium (1726) was a handbook of advice for young graduates to the ministry: on doing good, on college love affairs, on poetry and…
- magnamycin (chemistry)
Robert Burns Woodward: Scientific career: …of antibiotics: terramycin, aureomycin, and magnamycin.
- Magnani, Anna (Italian actress)
Anna Magnani was an Italian actress, known for her forceful portrayals of earthy, working-class women. She won the Academy Award for best actress for her performance in The Rose Tattoo (1955). Born out of wedlock, Magnani never knew her father and was deserted by her mother, Marina Magnani. She was
- Magnasco, Alessandro (Italian painter)
Alessandro Magnasco was an Italian painter of the late Baroque period distinguished for his landscapes and genre paintings. Magnasco worked in Milan but is thought to have been influenced by the Bolognese painter Giuseppe Maria Crespi. Although Magnasco began as a portrait painter, only a
- Magnavox Company (American electronics company)
electronic game: From chess to Spacewar! to Pong: …legal obstacle posed by the Magnavox Company’s hold on the patent for video games (discussed in the next section), Atari geared up to manufacture arcade consoles in volume. It thus created the “coin-op” game industry, achieving such success that it drew competitors into its new business space, the electronic game…
- Magne, Tour (tower, Nîmes, France)
Nîmes: The Tour Magne, atop a hill just outside the city, is the oldest Roman building, 92 feet (28 metres) high, but probably originally higher. Its original function is not known, but it was incorporated into the Roman wall in 16 bce.
- Magnel, Gustave (Belgian engineer)
bridge: Eugène Freyssinet: …in Philadelphia, was designed by Gustave Magnel and features three simply supported girder spans with a centre span of 48 metres (160 feet) and two end spans of 22 metres (74 feet). Although it was plain in appearance, a local art jury responsible for final approval found that the slim…
- Magnentius (Roman emperor)
Magnentius was a usurping Roman emperor from Jan. 18, 350, to Aug. 11, 353. His career forms one episode in the struggles for imperial power that occurred after the death of Constantine the Great (ruled 306–337). Magnentius was a pagan of German descent who had achieved distinction as a soldier
- Magnes, Judah Leon (American rabbi)
Judah Leon Magnes was a rabbi, religious leader, prime founder and first president of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and a Zionist who came to favour a binational Arab–Jewish state. A graduate of the University of Cincinnati (A.B., 1898), Magnes attended Hebrew Union College and was ordained
- magnesia (chemical compound)
alkaline-earth metal: History: Magnesia (the name derives probably from Magnesia, a district of Thessaly in Greece), the oxide of magnesium, was shown to be an alkaline earth different from lime by the Scottish chemist Joseph Black in 1755; he observed that magnesia gave rise to a soluble sulfate,…
- Magnesia (Turkey)
Manisa, city, western Turkey. It lies in the valley of the Gediz River (ancient Hermus River), below Mount Sipylus (Manisa Dağı), 20 miles (32 km) northeast of İzmir. It was called Magnesia ad Sipylum in ancient times, and the Magnetes of Thessaly are thought to have been its first inhabitants, in
- Magnesia ad Maeandrum (ancient city, Turkey)
Magnesia ad Maeandrum, ancient inland city of Ionia, situated on a small tributary of the Maeander (Büyükmenderes) River about 12 miles southeast of Ephesus. According to Strabo, it was founded by some Thessalian Magnetes, who had collected fellow settlers from Crete en route. Accounted an Aeolian
- Magnesia ad Sipylum (ancient city, Turkey)
Magnesia ad Sipylum, city in ancient Lydia, just south of the Hermus (Gediz) River. Though lying in a rich district near prehistoric regions associated with Niobe and Tantalus, and itself going back to the 5th century bc, it is of little importance except for the battle of winter 190/189 bc,
- magnesia alba (chemical compound)
playa: Saline minerals: …are calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and magnesium carbonate (MgCO3). These form the outer “bathtub ring.” The next ring consists of sulfates of calcium and sodium (CaSO4 and Na2SO4, respectively). If sufficient calcium is present, gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) will form. If less calcium is present, thenardite (Na2SO4) and sodium carbonate
- magnesia magma (chemical compound)
magnesium processing: Chemical compounds: The best-known medical compounds are milk of magnesia, or magnesium hydroxide, which is used as an antacid or as a mineral supplement to maintain the body’s magnesium balance. The hydrous magnesium sulfate popularly known as Epsom salts, MgSO4·7H2O, is used as a laxative.
- magnesia usta (chemical compound)
alkaline-earth metal: History: Magnesia (the name derives probably from Magnesia, a district of Thessaly in Greece), the oxide of magnesium, was shown to be an alkaline earth different from lime by the Scottish chemist Joseph Black in 1755; he observed that magnesia gave rise to a soluble sulfate,…
- Magnesia, Battle of (Greece [190 BCE])
Antiochus III the Great: …was decisively defeated in the Battle of Magnesia near Mt. Sipylus, where he fought with a heterogeneous army of 70,000 men against an army of 30,000 Romans and their allies. Although he could have continued the war in the eastern provinces, he renounced all claim to his conquests in Europe…
- magnesia, milk of (chemical compound)
magnesium processing: Chemical compounds: The best-known medical compounds are milk of magnesia, or magnesium hydroxide, which is used as an antacid or as a mineral supplement to maintain the body’s magnesium balance. The hydrous magnesium sulfate popularly known as Epsom salts, MgSO4·7H2O, is used as a laxative.
- magnesioferrite (mineral)
magnesioferrite, the mineral magnesium iron oxide, a member of the magnetite (q.v.) series of
- Magnesiopolis (Turkey)
Manisa, city, western Turkey. It lies in the valley of the Gediz River (ancient Hermus River), below Mount Sipylus (Manisa Dağı), 20 miles (32 km) northeast of İzmir. It was called Magnesia ad Sipylum in ancient times, and the Magnetes of Thessaly are thought to have been its first inhabitants, in
- magnesioriebeckite (mineral)
magnesioriebeckite, magnesium-rich variety of the silicate mineral riebeckite
- magnesite (mineral)
magnesite, the mineral magnesium carbonate (MgCO3), a member of the calcite group of carbonate minerals that is a principal source of magnesium. The mineral has formed as an alteration product from magnesium-rich rocks or through the action of magnesium-containing solutions upon calcite. Notable
- magnesium (chemical element)
magnesium (Mg), chemical element, one of the alkaline-earth metals of Group 2 (IIa) of the periodic table, and the lightest structural metal. Its compounds are widely used in construction and medicine, and magnesium is one of the elements essential to all cellular life. atomic number 12 atomic
- magnesium carbonate (chemical compound)
playa: Saline minerals: …are calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and magnesium carbonate (MgCO3). These form the outer “bathtub ring.” The next ring consists of sulfates of calcium and sodium (CaSO4 and Na2SO4, respectively). If sufficient calcium is present, gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) will form. If less calcium is present, thenardite (Na2SO4) and sodium carbonate
- magnesium chloride (chemical compound)
magnesium processing: History: …involved the reduction of molten magnesium chloride by metallic potassium. In 1833 the English scientist Michael Faraday was the first to produce magnesium by the electrolysis of molten magnesium chloride. His experiments were repeated by the German chemist Robert Bunsen.
- magnesium cordierite (synthetic mineral compound)
cordierite: Synthetic magnesium cordierite has a low thermal expansion and is used as a semirefractory material because of its resistance to thermal shock.
- magnesium deficiency (pathology)
magnesium deficiency, condition in which magnesium is insufficient or is not utilized properly. Magnesium is a mineral that is essential to a variety of cellular metabolic reactions and sometimes has the ability to replace a portion of body calcium. It is also required for the synthesis of
- magnesium germanate (chemical compound)
olivine: Meteorites and the Earth’s mantle: Study of the olivine-like compound magnesium germanate, Mg2GeO4, showed that it has polymorphs that have both olivine and spinel structure. In the spinel structure, the oxygen atoms are arranged in cubic closest packing (in which the position of every third layer repeats that of the initial layer) instead of hexagonal…
- magnesium hydride (chemical compound)
hydride: Saline (ionic) hydrides: …of beryllium hydride, BeH2, and magnesium hydride, MgH2). These metals enter into a direct reaction with hydrogen at elevated temperatures (300–700 °C [570–1,300 °F]) to produce hydrides of the general formulas MH and MH2. Such compounds are white crystalline solids when pure but are usually gray, owing to trace impurities…
- magnesium hydroxide (chemical compound)
magnesium processing: Electrolysis: An insoluble magnesium hydroxide precipitates to the bottom of a settling tank, whence it is pumped as a slurry, filtered, converted to magnesium chloride by reaction with hydrochloric acid, and dried in a series of evaporation steps to 25 percent water content. Final dehydration takes place during…
- magnesium oxide (chemical compound)
alkaline-earth metal: History: Magnesia (the name derives probably from Magnesia, a district of Thessaly in Greece), the oxide of magnesium, was shown to be an alkaline earth different from lime by the Scottish chemist Joseph Black in 1755; he observed that magnesia gave rise to a soluble sulfate,…
- magnesium processing
magnesium processing, preparation of magnesium ore for use in various products. Magnesium (Mg) is a silvery white metal that is similar in appearance to aluminum but weighs one-third less. With a density of only 1.738 grams per cubic centimetre, it is the lightest structural metal known. It has a
- magnesium sulfate (chemical compound)
Epsom and Ewell: …mineral springs there (from which Epsom salts were named). Stoneleigh, which was developed from farm fields and woods in the 1930s, took its name from the Stone family, which had owned the land, and from a mansion that had been located on their property.
- magnesium tourmaline (mineral)
dravite, a brown, magnesium-rich variety of tourmaline. See
- magnet (physics)
magnet, any material capable of attracting iron and producing a magnetic field outside itself. By the end of the 19th century all the known elements and many compounds had been tested for magnetism, and all were found to have some magnetic property. The most common was the property of diamagnetism,
- Magnet Cove (Arkansas, United States)
Arkansas: Resources and power: Magnet Cove, near Hot Springs in west-central Arkansas, contains dozens of minerals in one small valley, among which barite and titanium are the most important. Arkansas whetstones, made from novaculite, are regarded as among the finest in the world. Near Murfreesboro, in southwestern Arkansas, is…
- magnet ring (synchrotron)
particle accelerator: History: …cost of fabricating the huge magnet rings required—the largest weighs approximately 40,000 tons. A means of increasing the energy without increasing the scale of the machines was provided by a demonstration in 1952 by Livingston, Ernest D. Courant, and H.S. Snyder of the technique of alternating-gradient focusing (sometimes called strong…
- magnetar (astronomy)
neutron star: …radio transients (RRATs) and as magnetars. The RRATs are sources that emit single radio bursts but at irregular intervals ranging from four minutes to three hours. The cause of the RRAT phenomenon is unknown. Magnetars are highly magnetized neutron stars that have a magnetic field of between 1014 and 1015…
- Magnetherm process (metallurgy)
magnesium processing: Thermal reduction: This technique, utilized in the Magnetherm process, has the advantage that the liquid slag can be heated directly by electric current through a water-cooled copper electrode. The reduction reaction occurs at 1,600 °C and 400–670 pascals pressure. Vaporized magnesium is condensed in a separate system attached to the reactor, and…
- magnetic anomaly (geophysics)
paleogeography: Linear magnetic anomalies: Earth’s magnetic field has another important property. Like the Sun’s magnetic field, Earth’s magnetic field periodically “flips,” or reverses polarity—that is, the North and South poles switch places. Fluctuations, or anomalies in the intensity of the magnetic field, occur at the boundaries between…
- magnetic attraction (physics)
magnetic force, attraction or repulsion that arises between electrically charged particles because of their motion. It is the basic force responsible for such effects as the action of electric motors and the attraction of magnets for iron. Electric forces exist among stationary electric charges;
- magnetic bottle
magnetic mirror: …be arranged to form a magnetic bottle that can trap charged particles in the middle.
- magnetic bubble memory (computer science)
ferrite: …single-crystal ferrites in which tiny magnetic domains called bubbles can be individually manipulated. A number of ferrites absorb microwave energy in only one direction or orientation; for this reason, they are used in microwave wave guides.
- magnetic ceramics
magnetic ceramics, oxide materials that exhibit a certain type of permanent magnetization called ferrimagnetism. Commercially prepared magnetic ceramics are used in a variety of permanent magnet, transformer, telecommunications, and information recording applications. This article describes the
- magnetic charge (physics)
magnetic monopole: …monopole, hypothetical particle with a magnetic charge, a property analogous to an electric charge. As implied by its name, the magnetic monopole consists of a single pole, as opposed to the dipole, which is comprised of two magnetic poles. As yet there is no evidence for the existence of magnetic…
- magnetic circuit (electronics)
magnetic circuit, closed path to which a magnetic field, represented as lines of magnetic flux, is confined. In contrast to an electric circuit through which electric charge flows, nothing actually flows in a magnetic circuit. In a ring-shaped electromagnet with a small air gap, the magnetic field
- magnetic compass (navigational instrument)
magnetic compass, in navigation or surveying, an instrument for determining direction on the surface of Earth by means of a magnetic pointer that aligns itself with Earth’s magnetic field. The magnetic compass is the oldest and most familiar type of compass and is used in different forms in
- magnetic confinement (physics)
nuclear fusion: Magnetic confinement: In magnetic confinement the particles and energy of a hot plasma are held in place using magnetic fields. A charged particle in a magnetic field experiences a Lorentz force that is proportional to the product of the particle’s velocity and the magnetic field.…
- magnetic damping (physics)
damping: In magnetic damping, energy of motion is converted to heat by way of electric eddy currents induced in either a coil or an aluminum plate (attached to the oscillating object) that passes between the poles of a magnet.
- magnetic declination (compass)
navigation: The lodestone and the compass card: …but is now called the variation or declination. For a time, compass makers in northern countries mounted the needle askew on the card so that the fleur-de-lis indicated true north when the needle pointed to magnetic north. This practice died out about 1700 because it succeeded only for short voyages…
- magnetic dip (geophysics)
geomagnetic field: Representation of the field: The dip angle, I (for inclination), is the angle that the total field vector makes with respect to the horizontal plane and is positive for vectors below the plane. It is the complement of the usual polar angle of spherical coordinates. (Geographic and magnetic north coincide…
- magnetic dipole (physics)
magnetic dipole, generally a tiny magnet of microscopic to subatomic dimensions, equivalent to a flow of electric charge around a loop. Electrons circulating around atomic nuclei, electrons spinning on their axes, and rotating positively charged atomic nuclei all are magnetic dipoles. The sum of
- magnetic dipole moment (physics)
atom: Bohr’s shell model: …to the orientation of their magnetic moments. In their experiment Stern and Gerlach found only two deflections, not the continuous distribution of deflections that would have been seen if the magnetic moment had been oriented in any direction. Thus, it was determined that the magnetic moment and the angular momentum…
- magnetic disk (electronics)
computer memory: Magnetic disk drives: Magnetic disks are coated with a magnetic material such as iron oxide. There are two types: hard disks made of rigid aluminum or glass, and removable diskettes made of flexible plastic. In 1956 the first magnetic hard drive (HD) was invented at…
- magnetic domain (physics)
Barkhausen effect: …the size and orientation of ferromagnetic domains, or microscopic clusters of aligned atomic magnets, that occurs during a continuous process of magnetization or demagnetization. The Barkhausen effect offered direct evidence for the existence of ferromagnetic domains, which previously had been postulated theoretically.
- magnetic drum (computing)
magnetic recording: Other magnetic recording devices.: Such magnetic recording mediums as drums and ferrite cores have been used for data storage since the early 1950s. A more recent development is the magnetic bubble memory devised in the late 1970s at Bell Telephone Laboratories.
- magnetic field (physics)
magnetic field, a vector field in the neighbourhood of a magnet, electric current, or changing electric field, in which magnetic forces are observable. Magnetic fields such as that of Earth cause magnetic compass needles and other permanent magnets to line up in the direction of the field. Magnetic
- magnetic field intensity (physics)
magnetic field strength, the part of the magnetic field in a material that arises from an external current and is not intrinsic to the material itself. It is expressed as the vector H and is measured in units of amperes per metre. The definition of H is H = B/μ − M, where B is the magnetic flux
- magnetic field line (physics)
electromagnetism: Faraday’s law of induction: …found that (1) a changing magnetic field in a circuit induces an electromotive force in the circuit; and (2) the magnitude of the electromotive force equals the rate at which the flux of the magnetic field through the circuit changes. The flux is a measure of how much field penetrates…
- magnetic field strength (physics)
magnetic field strength, the part of the magnetic field in a material that arises from an external current and is not intrinsic to the material itself. It is expressed as the vector H and is measured in units of amperes per metre. The definition of H is H = B/μ − M, where B is the magnetic flux
- Magnetic Fields, The (work by Breton and Soupault)
Philippe Soupault: …authored Les Champs magnétiques (1920; The Magnetic Fields), known as the first major Surrealist work. Soupault soon abandoned automatic writing to produce carefully crafted verses such as those in Westwego (1922) and Georgia (1926). As the Surrealist movement became increasingly dogmatic and political, Soupault grew dissatisfied with it and eventually…
- magnetic flux (physics)
electromagnetism: Faraday’s law of induction: …found that (1) a changing magnetic field in a circuit induces an electromotive force in the circuit; and (2) the magnitude of the electromotive force equals the rate at which the flux of the magnetic field through the circuit changes. The flux is a measure of how much field penetrates…
- magnetic flux density (physics)
hysteresis: …the total magnetic field, or magnetic flux density B. The aligning process does not occur simultaneously or in step with the magnetizing field but lags behind it.
- magnetic force (physics)
magnetic force, attraction or repulsion that arises between electrically charged particles because of their motion. It is the basic force responsible for such effects as the action of electric motors and the attraction of magnets for iron. Electric forces exist among stationary electric charges;
- magnetic glass (material science)
amorphous solid: Magnetic glasses: The last entry in the table of technological applications of amorphous solids is an application of metallic glasses having magnetic properties. These are typically iron-rich amorphous solids with compositions such as Fe0.8B0.2 iron-boron and Fe0.8B0.1Si0.1 iron-boron-silicon. They
- magnetic head (magnetic recording)
sound recording: The audiotape: The recording head of the tape deck consists of a tiny C-shaped magnet with its gap adjacent to the moving tape. The incoming sound wave, having been converted by a microphone into an electrical signal, produces a time-varying magnetic field in the gap of the magnet. As…
- magnetic hyperfine structure (physics)
spectroscopy: Origins: …of its nucleus is called magnetic hyperfine structure. Separations between levels differing only in the relative orientation of the magnetic field of the nucleus and electron range typically from 106 hertz to 1010 hertz.
- magnetic induction (physics)
hysteresis: …the total magnetic field, or magnetic flux density B. The aligning process does not occur simultaneously or in step with the magnetizing field but lags behind it.
- magnetic intensity (physics)
magnetic field strength, the part of the magnetic field in a material that arises from an external current and is not intrinsic to the material itself. It is expressed as the vector H and is measured in units of amperes per metre. The definition of H is H = B/μ − M, where B is the magnetic flux
- magnetic iron ore (mineral)
magnetite, iron oxide mineral (FeFe2O4, or Fe3O4) that is the chief member of one of the series of the spinel (q.v.) group. Minerals in this series form black to brownish, metallic, moderately hard octahedrons and masses in igneous and metamorphic rocks and in granite pegmatites, stony meteorites,
- Magnetic Island (island, Queensland, Australia)
Magnetic Island, island in the Cumberland Islands, off the coast of northeastern Queensland, Australia, in Halifax Bay, an inlet of the Coral Sea. It is one of the most easily accessible islands of the Great Barrier Reef, being only 5 miles (8 km) offshore from Townsville. Coral-fringed, wooded,
- magnetic levitation train (transportation)
maglev, a floating vehicle for land transportation that is supported by either electromagnetic attraction or repulsion. Maglevs were conceptualized during the early 1900s by American professor and inventor Robert Goddard and French-born American engineer Emile Bachelet and have been in commercial
- magnetic map (geophysics)
magnetic survey: …equal intensity to give a magnetic map of the target area that may clearly indicate the size and extent of the anomalous body.
- magnetic mine (submarine mine)
mine: Submarine mine: The magnetic mine is triggered by the approaching ship’s magnetic field. The pressure mine employs the principle that beneath every ship in motion in shallow water there is an area of reduced pressure. The pressure mine contains a chamber divided by a diaphragm, with one side…
- magnetic mirror (physics)
magnetic mirror, static magnetic field that, within a localized region, has a shape such that approaching charged particles are repelled back along their path of approach. A magnetic field is usually described as a distribution of nearly parallel nonintersecting field lines. The direction of these
- magnetic moment (physics)
atom: Bohr’s shell model: …to the orientation of their magnetic moments. In their experiment Stern and Gerlach found only two deflections, not the continuous distribution of deflections that would have been seen if the magnetic moment had been oriented in any direction. Thus, it was determined that the magnetic moment and the angular momentum…
- magnetic monopole (physics)
magnetic monopole, hypothetical particle with a magnetic charge, a property analogous to an electric charge. As implied by its name, the magnetic monopole consists of a single pole, as opposed to the dipole, which is comprised of two magnetic poles. As yet there is no evidence for the existence of
- magnetic mound (zoology)
termite: Nest types: …wedge-shaped mounds, called compass or magnetic mounds, that are 3 to 4 metres (9.8 to 13.1 feet) high, 2.5 metres (8.1 feet) wide, and 1 metre (3.2 feet) thick at the base. The long axis is always directed north-south, and the broad side faces east-west, an orientation that probably functions…
- Magnetic North Pole (geophysics)
Sir James Clark Ross: …John Ross, he located the north magnetic pole on June 1, 1831. His own Antarctic expedition of 1839–43 was undertaken to conduct magnetic observations and to reach the south magnetic pole. Commanding the Erebus and Terror, he discovered the Ross Sea in 1841 and, while sailing toward the position assigned…
- magnetic observatory (geophysics)
geomagnetic field: Measurement of the field: Magnetic observatories continuously measure and record Earth’s magnetic field at a number of locations. In an observatory of this sort, magnetized needles with reflecting mirrors are suspended by quartz fibres. Light beams reflected from the mirrors are imaged on a photographic negative mounted on a…
- magnetic permeability (physics)
magnetic permeability, relative increase or decrease in the resultant magnetic field inside a material compared with the magnetizing field in which the given material is located; or the property of a material that is equal to the magnetic flux density B established within the material by a
- magnetic pigment (chemistry)
surface coating: Specialty, functional, and other pigments: Magnetic pigments, such as acicular iron oxide and chromium oxide pigments, are used in magnetic audio and video tapes for information storage.
- magnetic polarization (physics)
magnetism: Fundamentals: …depends on the degree of magnetization of the matter in the field. Magnetization depends on the size of the dipole moments of the atoms in a substance and the degree to which the dipole moments are aligned with respect to each other. Certain materials, such as iron, exhibit very strong…
- magnetic pole (physics)
magnetic pole, region at each end of a magnet where the external magnetic field is strongest. A bar magnet suspended in Earth’s magnetic field orients itself in a north–south direction. The north-seeking pole of such a magnet, or any similar pole, is called a north magnetic pole. The south-seeking
- magnetic prospecting
rock: Applications of the study of rock magnetization: In magnetic prospecting, one is interested in mapping the depth, size, type, and inferred composition of buried rocks. The prospecting, which may be done from ground surface, ship, or aircraft, provides an important first step in exploring buried geologic structures and may, for example, help identify…
- magnetic pulsation (physics)
geomagnetic field: Magnetohydrodynamic waves—magnetic pulsations: Magnetic pulsations have been classified phenomenologically on the basis of waveform into pulsations continuous (Pc) and pulsations irregular (Pi). Each class is subdivided into different frequency bands supposedly on the basis of boundaries defined by different generation mechanisms. By definition, magnetic pulsations fall into the…
- magnetic quantum number (physics)
spectroscopy: Angular momentum quantum numbers: There is a magnetic quantum number also associated with the angular momentum of the quantum state. For a given orbital momentum quantum number l, there are 2l + 1 integral magnetic quantum numbers ml ranging from −l to l, which restrict the fraction of the total angular momentum…
- magnetic random access memory (electronics)
nanotechnology: Information storage: Known as magnetic random access memory (MRAM), a line of electrically switchable magnetic material is separated from a permanently magnetized layer by a nanoscale nonmagnetic interlayer. A resistance change that depends on the relative alignment of the fields is read electrically from a large array of wires…
- magnetic reconnection (atmospheric science)
geomagnetic field: Magnetic reconnection: The observed dependence of geomagnetic activity on the orientation of the IMF is explained by most researchers as a consequence of magnetic reconnection. In reconnection, two oppositely directed magnetic fields are brought together by flowing plasmas at an x-type neutral line. Far from…
- magnetic recording (electronics)
magnetic recording, method of preserving sounds, pictures, and data in the form of electrical signals through the selective magnetization of portions of a magnetic material. The principle of magnetic recording was first demonstrated by the Danish engineer Valdemar Poulsen in 1900, when he
- magnetic repulsion (physics)
magnetic force, attraction or repulsion that arises between electrically charged particles because of their motion. It is the basic force responsible for such effects as the action of electric motors and the attraction of magnets for iron. Electric forces exist among stationary electric charges;
- magnetic resistance (magnetism)
electromagnet: …rϕ, where r is the reluctance of the magnetic circuit and is equivalent to resistance in the electric circuit. Reluctance is obtained by dividing the length of the magnetic path l by the permeability times the cross-sectional area A; thus r = l/μA, the Greek letter mu, μ, symbolizing the…
- magnetic resonance (physics)
magnetic resonance, absorption or emission of electromagnetic radiation by electrons or atomic nuclei in response to the application of certain magnetic fields. The principles of magnetic resonance are applied in the laboratory to analyze the atomic and nuclear properties of matter. Electron-spin
- magnetic resonance accelerator (instrument)
cyclotron, any of a class of devices that accelerates charged atomic or subatomic particles in a constant magnetic field. The first particle accelerator of this type was developed in the early 1930s by the American physicists Ernest Orlando Lawrence and M. Stanley Livingston. A cyclotron consists
- magnetic resonance angiography (physics)
magnetic resonance imaging: In addition, magnetic resonance angiography, a unique form of MRI technology, can be used to produce an image of flowing blood. This permits the visualization of arteries and veins without the need for needles, catheters, or contrast agents. As with MRI, these techniques have helped revolutionize biomedical…
- magnetic resonance imaging (medicine)
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), three-dimensional diagnostic imaging technique used to visualize organs and structures inside the body without the need for X-rays or other radiation. MRI is valuable for providing detailed anatomical images and can reveal minute changes that occur over time. It
- magnetic resonance spectrometry (chemistry)
heterocyclic compound: Ultraviolet, infrared, nuclear magnetic resonance, and mass spectra: Magnetic resonance spectra are indispensable today for studies in heterocyclic chemistry. Proton resonance spectra, the most common type, yield information regarding the number of hydrogen atoms in the molecule, their chemical environment, and their relative orientation in space. Mass spectra are used to determine not…
- magnetic resonance spectroscopy (medicine)
magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), diagnostic imaging technique based on the detection of metabolites in tissues. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is related to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in that it uses the same machinery; however, instead of measuring blood flow, MRS measures the
- magnetic reversal (geophysics)
geomagnetic reversal, an alternation of the Earth’s magnetic polarity in geologic time. See polar
- magnetic Reynolds number (physics)
magnetic Reynolds number, combination of quantities that indicates the dynamic behaviour of a plasma. This number is analogous to the Reynolds number of ordinary fluid mechanics, which is used to determine whether or not a fluid flow will smooth out or become turbulent. If the magnetic permeability