what is this? any info?
I've seen something like this at my old school, we used a magnet and a cooled(supercooled with liquid nitrogen) superconductor with a small magnet on top, the superconductor made the magnet "fly" just a centimeter over the table :)
This is the explanation
magic
Sorry Ali Heibi but your "explanation" is totally irrelevant
In your video, they just use an electro-magnet to repulse a copper ring in which an electric current has been induced. That's nothing but classical electromagnetism.
In the gif, a permanent magnet hovers over a supraconductor because, due to quantum restrictions, no magnetic field can enter a supercooled supraconductor. This is a totally different phenomenon, that you cannot explain or interpret with a good quantum theory or fields theory
I advise you to look this up on Wikipedia (for starters), that stuff is really interesting physics!
Sources: I'm an engineer and physicist student working an internship in a cryomagnet lab
In your video, they just use an electro-magnet to repulse a copper ring in which an electric current has been induced. That's nothing but classical electromagnetism.
In the gif, a permanent magnet hovers over a supraconductor because, due to quantum restrictions, no magnetic field can enter a supercooled supraconductor. This is a totally different phenomenon, that you cannot explain or interpret with a good quantum theory or fields theory
I advise you to look this up on Wikipedia (for starters), that stuff is really interesting physics!
Sources: I'm an engineer and physicist student working an internship in a cryomagnet lab
Nice man! I love to know new scientific stuff.
I'm a mechenical engineering student, but this is not part of my training so I guessed this was the explanation.
I'm a mechenical engineering student, but this is not part of my training so I guessed this was the explanation.
-with +without ...
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