Message from @negatic
Discord ID: 622555915068899348
What
there problem solved
No what
Curie point, is the temperature above which certain materials lose their permanent magnetic properties
perma magnets is some different thatn whats happening in core
That’s absolutely not true
yeah bro, look at how hot the inner core is
if magnetism was based on iron in the ground then compasses would be all over the place @the21cat
if u for example have a spule thats not amgnetic and run current through u have a magnet
and the temperature its magnetic properties shouldnt function
Magnetic fields can lose their both and south poles
Yeah thats true
but they’ll still have magnetic properties
So what actually is causing it?
And anyway heating wouldn’t make them lose that either
big brain
@Teddy uhm that curie temperature doenst apply at core its for perma magnets
what is a perma magnet
^
like a solid?
similar to how we store data on disc
What
i don't see no permanent magnets in the wikipedia article mate
u have metal and the atoms or molecules get orderd and all point in same direction
then they have a constant magnetic field
yeah
tahts basically perma magnet
so what is the core?
is it not in a single direction
its moving metal
Have you heard of polarity in chemistry
iron i think
yeah water is super polar
Thats the other part of the direction thing
well enough for it to do weird stuff
https://www.google.com/search?q=why+does+iron+lose+its+magnetism+when+heated&oq=does+iron+lose+its+magnetism+if+&aqs=chrome.1.69i57j0.6759j1j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Iron does loses its magnetic properties when heated bro
Yes what obliterator said
you playing semantics with me innit?
lucas the point isn't that it is inherently magnetic
but the moving current of the metal makes a magnetic field