Lec # | Topics | Details | INSTRUCTORS | KEY DATES |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Introduction: Basics of Hard and Soft Magnetic Materials | Earth's magnetic field, north and south poles, attraction and repulsion, magnetic torques, forces, energy. Hard (permanent) and soft (temporary) magnetic materials. Saturation magnetization, coercivity, magnetic viewers. | Dr. James Livingston | |
2 | Magnetic Forces and Curie Temperatures | Visit: MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center. See demonstrations of Curie temperature, induction, levitation, plasma control, etc. by MIT's "Mr. Magnet." | Paul Thomas | Assignment 1 due |
3 | Basics of Electromagnetism | Magnetism from electricity (electromagnets), electricity from magnetism (induction), magnetic levitation. | Dr. James Livingston | Assignment 2 due |
4 | Magnetic Data Recording | Visit: Prof. Ross's Magnetic Materials and Devices Group. Discuss magnetic recording materials and systems, hard disks, other forms of data recording. | Prof. Caroline Ross, Department of Materials Science and Engineering | Assignment 3 due |
5 | Superconductivity | Use liquid nitrogen to show the levitation of magnets above a "high-temperature" superconductor and learn a bit about superconductivity and its applications. We also may be able to cool other things to 77 Kelvin to see how their properties change. | Dr. James Livingston | Assignment 4 due |
6 | Brain Magnetic Fields | Visit: Magnetoencephalography Lab. See how a magnetically shielded room and SQUIDs are used measure the magnetic fields produced by the human brain. | Prof. Alec Marantz, Department of Linguistics | Assignment 5 due |
7 | Oral Presentations - Part 1 | Student presentations on the Gauss rifle, bird navigation, and magnetism and relativity. | Students | |
8 | Magnets in Cyclotrons, CERN, and Space | Visit: Cyclotron Building. Perform hands-on experiments in the large cyclotron magnet, directly seeing and feeling the effects of large magnetic fields on conductors. Learn about their space-based and land-based research employing magnets. | Dr. Ben Monreal, Electromagnetics Group of the Laboratory for Nuclear Science | Assignment 6 due |
9 | Oral Presentations - Part 2 | Student presentations on NMR in chemistry, magnetic therapy, and rail guns and coil guns. | Students | |
10 | Magnets in NMR, EPR, Mass Spectroscopy | Visit: Chemistry Department's Instrumentation Facility. See a collection of large superconducting electromagnets used for NMR and learn how they are used to analyze molecular structure. | Dr. Hyongjun Pan | |
11 | Ferrofluids | Begin with experiments on ferrofluids (suspensions of fine magnetic particles in liquids). Visit: Prof. Doyle's Dynamics of Biopolymers and Complex Fluids laboratory, where they have employed magnetic microparticles for DNA separation. | Prof. Patrick Doyle, Department of Chemical Engineering | |
12 | Wrap-up | Discuss this seminar, your first term at MIT, and your plans for the rest of the school year. | Assignment 7 due |