Magnetoelastic Interactions

The modern theory of ferromagnetic magnetization processes has from the beginning recognized the importance of magnetoelastic inter­ actions. Most of the magnetoelastic calculations, however, have been basecl on the theory developed by R. BECKER and others in the early 1930's. That theory has s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brown, William F.Jr
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 1966, 1966
Edition:1st ed. 1966
Series:Springer Tracts in Natural Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Magnetoelastic Interactions  |h Elektronische Ressource  |c by William F.Jr. Brown 
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260 |a Berlin, Heidelberg  |b Springer Berlin Heidelberg  |c 1966, 1966 
300 |a VIII, 156 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a I Fundamental Concepts and Definitions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Magnetostatic Fundamentals -- 3. Concepts of Elasticity Theory -- 4. Thermodynamic Principles -- II Force and Stress Relations in a Deformable Magnetic Material -- 5. The Forces in General -- 6. Equilibrium in a Magnetizable Elastic Solid -- III The Energy Method -- 7. Formal Theory -- 8. Terms in the Free Energy -- 9. The Small-Displacement Approximation -- IV Applications -- 10. The Magnetostriction of a Uniformly Magnetized Ellipsoid -- 11. Problems of Micromagnetics -- Appendix A -- The Variation of the Magnetic Self-Energy -- Appendix B -- Proof of the Magnetic Reciprocity Theorem (11.32) -- Appendix C -- On Angular Velocity -- References -- Author Index 
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653 |a Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics 
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520 |a The modern theory of ferromagnetic magnetization processes has from the beginning recognized the importance of magnetoelastic inter­ actions. Most of the magnetoelastic calculations, however, have been basecl on the theory developed by R. BECKER and others in the early 1930's. That theory has several defects; how to remedy them is the subject of this monograph. I first became aware of the shortcomings of the traditional theory thru a critical study of electric and magnetic forces, which I undcrtook as a member of the COULOMB'S Law Committee of the American Asso­ ciation of Physics Teachers. My conclusions were published in 1951 in the American 10Z/rnal of Physics; an application of them to a problem in magnetostriction was published in 1953 in Reviews oflvlodern Physics. With the development, in 1956, of the "nucleation field" theory of micromagnetics, the need for a systematic and self-consistent theory of magnetoelastic interactions became more pressing. The traditional theory predicted that the nucleation field should differ negligibly from that of a rigid body; but my 1953 magnetostriction calculation suggested that terms omitted in that theory might be important. In the academic year 1963/64, 1 was finally able - thanks to a sabbatical furlough - to find the time needed for systematic development of a basic theory of magnetoelastic interactions in a ferromagnet