Orders of magnitude (magnetic field)
This page lists examples of magnetic induction B in teslas and gauss produced by various sources, grouped by orders of magnitude.
Note:
- Traditionally, magnetizing field H, is measured in amperes per meter.
- Magnetic induction B (also known as magnetic flux density) has the SI unit tesla [T or Wb/m2].[1]
- One tesla is equal to 104 gauss.
- Magnetic field drops off as the cube of the distance from a dipole source.
Orders of Magnitude
These examples attempt to make the measuring point clear, usually the surface of the item mentioned.
| Factor (tesla) | SI prefix | Value (SI units) | Value (CGS units) | Item | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10−18 | attotesla | 5 aT | 50 fG | SQUID magnetometers on Gravity Probe B gyroscopes measure fields at this level over several days of averaged measurements[2] | |
| 10−15 | femtotesla | 2 fT | 20 pG | SQUID magnetometers on Gravity Probe B gyros measure fields at this level in about one second | |
| 10−12 | picotesla | 100 fT to 1 pT | 1 nG to 10 nG | Human brain magnetic field | |
| 10−11 | 10 pT | 100 nG | In September 2006, NASA found "potholes" in the magnetic field in the heliosheath around our solar system that are 10 picoteslas as reported by Voyager 1[3] | ||
| 10−9 | nanotesla | 100 pT to 10 nT | 1 µG to 100 µG | Magnetic field strength in the heliosphere | |
| 10−6 | microtesla | 24 µT | 240 mG | Strength of magnetic tape near tape head | |
| 10−5 | 31 µT | 310 mG | Strength of Earth's magnetic field at 0° latitude (on the equator) | ||
| 58 µT | 580 mG | Strength of Earth's magnetic field at 50° latitude | |||
| 10−3 | millitesla | 0.5 mT | 5 G | The suggested exposure limit for cardiac pacemakers by American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) | |
| 5 mT | 50 G | The strength of a typical refrigerator magnet [4] | |||
| 10−1 | 0.15 T | 1.5 kG | The magnetic field strength of a sunspot | ||
| 100 | tesla | 1 T to 2.4 T | 10 kG to 24 kG | Coil gap of a typical loudspeaker magnet.[5] | |
| 1 T to 2 T | 10 kG to 20 kG | Inside the core of a modern 60 Hz power transformer[6][7] | |||
| 1.25 T | 12.5 kG | Strength of a modern neodymium–iron–boron (Nd2Fe14B) rare earth magnet. A coin-sized neodymium magnet can lift more than 9 kg, erase credit cards.[8] | |||
| 1.5 T to 3 T | 15 kG to 30 kG | Strength of medical magnetic resonance imaging systems in practice, experimentally up to 11.7 T[9][10][11] | |||
| 9.4 T | 94 kG | Modern high resolution research magnetic resonance imaging system; field strength of a 400 MHz NMR spectrometer | |||
| 101 | 11.7 T | 117 kG | Field strength of a 500 MHz NMR spectrometer | ||
| 16 T | 160 kG | Strength used to levitate a frog[12] | |||
| 23.5 T | 235 kG | Field strength of a 1 GHz NMR spectrometer[13] | |||
| 36.2 T | 362 kG | Strongest continuous magnetic field produced by non-superconductive resistive magnet.[14] | |||
| 45 T | 450 kG | Strongest continuous magnetic field yet produced in a laboratory (Florida State University's National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, USA).[15] | |||
| 102 | 300 T | 3 MG | Strongest pulsed non-destructive magnetic field yet produced in a laboratory, Pulsed Field Facility at National High Magnetic Field Laboratory's , Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA).[16] | ||
| 730 T | 7.3 MG | Strongest pulsed magnetic field yet obtained in a laboratory, destroying the equipment used, but not the laboratory itself (Institute for Solid State Physics, Tokyo) | |||
| 103 | kilotesla | 2.8 kT | 28 MG | Strongest (pulsed) magnetic field ever obtained (with explosives) in a laboratory (VNIIEF in Sarov, Russia, 1998)[17] | |
| 106 | megatesla | 1 MT to 100 MT | 10 GG to 1 TG | Strength of a neutron star | |
| 108 - 1011 | gigatesla | 100 MT to 100 GT | 1 TG to 1 PG | Strength of a magnetar | |
| 1053 | N/A | 2×1029 YT | 2×1033 YG | Planck magnetic field strength | |
References
- ↑ "Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, The International System of Units (SI), 8th edition 2006" (PDF). bipm.org. 2012-10-01. Retrieved 2013-05-26.
- ↑ Gravity Probe B
- ↑ "Surprises from the Edge of the Solar System". NASA. 2006-09-21.
- ↑ "Information on MRI Technique". Nevus Network. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
- ↑ Elliot, Rod. "Power Handling Vs. Efficiency". Retrieved 2008-02-17.
- ↑ "Inductors and transformers" (PDF). eece.ksu.edu. 2003-08-12. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 8, 2008. Retrieved 2013-05-26.
A modern well-designed 60 Hz power transformer will probably have a magnetic flux density between 1 and 2 T inside the core.
- ↑ "Trafo-Bestimmung 3von3". radiomuseum.org. 2009-07-11. Retrieved 2013-06-01.
- ↑ The Tesla Radio Conspiracy
- ↑ Savage, Niel. "The World's Most Powerful MRI Takes Shape".
- ↑ Smith, Hans-Jørgen. "Magnetic resonance imaging". Medcyclopaedia Textbook of Radiology. GE Healthcare. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved 2007-03-26.
- ↑ Orenstein, Beth W. (2006-02-16). "Ultra High-Field MRI — The Pull of Big Magnets". Radiology Today 7 (3). p. 10. Archived from the original on March 15, 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
- ↑ "Frog defies gravity".
- ↑ "23.5 Tesla Standard-Bore, Persistent Superconducting Magnet".
- ↑ "Mag Lab Reclaims World Record for Highest Field Resistive Magnet".
- ↑ "World's Most Powerful Magnet Tested Ushers in New Era for Steady High Field Research". National High Magnetic Field Laboratory.
- ↑ "Pulsed Field Facility - MagLab". Pulsed Field Facility.
- ↑ "With record magnetic fields to the 21st Century". IEEE Xplore.
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