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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: small magnets + strong magnets + magnets  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

Researchers knock cost from SmCo for rare earth magnets
ElectronicsWeekly.com, UK -
Of the rare-earth materials, SmCo magnets are not quite as strong as the NdFeB types used in disk drives and toys, but far more temperature resistant ...
OIl magnets
Science News - Jul 25, 2008
McHenry Group/Carnegie Mellon Imagine corralling an aquatic oil spill with a ring of magnets ? and then dragging that magnetic fence to some convenient spot ...
New Kind Of MRI Enables Study Of Magnets For Computer Memory
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 17, 2008
The disk-shaped magnets in this study measured only two micrometers (millionths of a meter) across. "Because ferromagnets generate such strong magnetic ...
Fans rush gates for Rage at Lollapalooza show
Chicago Sun-Times, United States - Aug 3, 2008
... and selling for $15), YWC/ ?Yes We Can? plastic drinking cups ($10), Barak bracelets ($4) and various posters, bumper stickers and refrigerator magnets. ...
Magnetic insights
spectroscopyNOW.com (subscription), UK - Jul 31, 2008
The disk-shaped magnets in their study measured a mere two micrometres in diameter. "Because ferromagnets generate such strong magnetic fields, ...
Earthweek: A Diary of the Planet
The Province, Canada - Aug 3, 2008
Magnetic Repulsion Researchers in Australia say they have discovered a unique and effective way to keep sharks away -- magnets. A team from the Department ...
Scientists Discover Rapid, Cost-Effective, 100% Recyclable Method ...
Newswise (press release) - Jul 28, 2008
Samarium Cobalt magnets are superior to other classes of permanent magnetic materials for advanced high-temperature applications and the Northeastern ...
Lawyers continue to lock up prime phone book advertising
Jacksonville Daily Record, FL -
Today?s phone books offer opportunities to advertise on the front and back covers, inside the covers, on magnets attached to the front cover, on the spine, ...
House and Senate Approve Tough Product Safety Law
Newsinferno.com, NY - Aug 1, 2008
... choking and strangulation hazards; and issues with small magnets, which can be swallowed and travel through the body, causing dangers when two magnets ...
CPSC Data Show Safety Recalls Increased 22% Over Last Year Kansas City infoZine
Protecting the Littlest Consumers New York Times
all 1,033 news articles »
Ferromagnet imaging technique could enable 'spintronic' devices
iT News, Australia - Jul 29, 2008
By Liz Tay Researchers have developed a new method of studying tiny magnets that could yield high-density memory based on the emerging field of spintronics. ...
Source: Google News

[BOOK] Superconducting Magnets -
MN Wilson - 1987 - books.google.com
... this potential has now been realized, as witnessed by the growing number of large
superconducting magnet systems and the thousands of small magnets now in ...

Magnets with strong geometric frustration -
R Moessner - Canadian Journal of Physics, 2001 - article.pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca
... For small but nonzero (?finite?) ... There is strong evidence from numerics that the
S = 1/2 ... field [34] or the triangular lattice Heisenberg magnet either with ...

Giant energy product in nanostructured two-phase magnets -
R Skomski, JMD Coey - Physical Review B, 1993 - APS
... rare-earth atoms in sites with strong uniaxial anisotropy ... kJ/m3 in laboratory-scale
magnets.2 The ... Interstitial modification with small atoms such as nitrogen or ...

High-temperature superconductor bulk magnets that can trap magnetic fields of over 17 tesla at 29 K -
M Tomita, M Murakami - Nature, 2003 - palgrave-journals.com
... product of electric current and magnetic field, so a strong magnetic field ... The range
of a stray field is very small in bulk superconductor magnets, so the ...

Surprises on the Way from One-to Two-Dimensional Quantum Magnets: The Ladder Materials -
E Dagotto, TM Rice - Science, 1996 - sciencemag.org
Page 1. * ARTICLE ----- Surprises on the Way from One- to Two- Dimensional Quantum
Magnets: The Ladder Materials Elbio Dagotto and TM Rice ...

Large Clusters of Metal Ions: The Transition from Molecular to Bulk Magnets -
D Gatteschi, A Caneschi, L Pardi, R Sessoli - Science, 1994 - sciencemag.org
... which should gradually change from those of simple paramagnets to those of bulk
magnets. ... ions, which corresponds to a small part of the lattice of goethite, FeO ...

Ferroelectricity in Spiral Magnets -
M Mostovoy - Physical Review Letters, 2006 - APS
... the higher harmonics in the SDW state are small and the helix ... in magnetic
field.--The salient feature of ferroelectric magnets is the strong sensitivity of ...

Pigeons have magnets -
C Walcott, JL Gould, JL Kirschvink - Science, 1979 - sciencemag.org
... of pigeons to orient on cloudy days is disrupted when small magnets (4) or ... can be
virtually abolished when the birds are released at strong magnetic anomalies ...

Remanence and coercivity in isotropic nanocrystalline permanent magnets -
T Schrefl, J Fidler, H Kronm?ller - Physical Review B, 1994 - APS
... analyses clearly show that strong exchange interactions account for ... in isotropic
nanocrys- talline permanent magnets. ... reversal process of small-grained magnets ...

Current status and future outlook for bonded neodymium permanent magnets (invited) -
JJ Croat - Journal of Applied Physics, 1997 - link.aip.org
... over the small appliance, office automation, automotive, consumer electronic, and
other miscellaneous markets. Virtually all of the bonded neodymium magnets ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Small, strong magnets hazardous to cardiac devices

Last Updated: 2006-12-08 16:25:12 -0400 (Reuters Health)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Magnets made from three elements - neodymium, iron and boron (NdFeB), sometimes referred to as "rare earth" magnets -- have the potential to interfere with cardiac pacemakers and implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), investigators from Switzerland warn in the current issue of the medical journal Heart Rhythm.

"What makes the new NdFeB magnets so special is their high magnetic field strength at very small sizes," Dr. Thomas Wolber of the Rhythmology Service, Cardiovascular Center, University Hospital Zurich told Reuters Health.

These magnets have recently gained popularity and are incorporated in toys, jewelry, name tags and are also available as larger magnets for household and office use. "Due to their very small size, their strength may be underestimated by patients," Dr. Wolber said.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

 

"Magnetic fields," he said, "can change the mode of pacing in pacemakers and can deactivate arrhythmia detection and treatment in ICDs. While interference with a pacemaker does not put the patient at substantial risk, deactivation of an ICD could prevent the device from delivering lifesaving therapies."

Wolber and his colleagues tested the effects of two round NdFeB magnets, of 8 and 10 millimeters diameter, and one necklace made of 45 round magnets on 41 patients with pacemakers and 29 with ICDs.

These small magnets caused interference in all patients at distances up to 3 centimeters, Wolber and colleagues report. The cardiac devices resumed normal function immediately after the magnets were removed.

"Small magnets (up to 8 grams) such as those tested in the study are safe as long as they are not used in close proximity (within 3 cm) to a cardiac device, as may be the case with jewelry (necklaces, earrings, brooches) or name tags," Wolber said.

"Spreading information about potential interference is essential because device inactivation for several hours, as may occur for example by a name-tag attached near the device all day, might be a real problem," he added.

In a commentary, Dr. Huagui Li of the Minnesota Heart Clinic in Edina says this study is "timely and important to attract the attention of both the public and the medical profession about the potentially serious health consequences of magnets used in decoration products. For an ICD patient, the magnet interference can be fatal."

Li and Wolber recommend that manufacturers who use these magnets in products should be required to include warnings in their product information.

SOURCE: Heart Rhythm, December 2006.

Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

 

'Fat scan' shows up health risk

A scan can spot which people harbour dangerous levels of fat around their vital internal organs, scientists say.

Hammersmith Hospital, in west London, is currently the only hospital in Europe using the MRI scan. Its scientists say 40% of the population have "bad" fat around the heart, liver or pancreas, even though many appear thin. They warn it is possible to be slim and yet still be at risk of conditions like diabetes because of "hidden" fat. Evidence suggests the precise location of fat has more of a bearing on health than simply being overweight.

For example, people who have too much weight around their middle, often called an "apple" shape, have a greater risk of developing heart disease and type 2 diabetes than those who are pear shaped and carry the weight around the hips.

While doctors can check whether a person is a healthy weight for their height by calculating their body mass index or BMI (weight in kilograms divided by height in metres squared), they cannot see the dangerous hidden fat. Lead researcher Professor Jimmy Bell, a Medical Research Council scientist, explained: "One of the problems with BMI is it gives you the wrong idea of how much fat you have. "It's about where you have the fat. "Fat is good in general, but when you have too much of it or fat in the wrong places it is bad.

"Someone can look really thin and have a normal BMI but have seven litres of fat inside them when they should ideally only have one litre."

Litres of internal fat

The MRI scan he uses can look inside the body and see if there is any dangerous fat lurking around the internal organs. Once doctors are aware someone has dangerous levels of hidden fat, they can work out the right combination of exercise and healthy eating needed to shift it, Professor Bell said. He explained: "We are trying to understand what factors - genetic and environmental - make people put on fat internally and then determine what people need to do to get rid of this fat. "When you diet you don't lose the right type of fat. If you exercise you lose more of the bad fat. "If people are only going to do an hour of exercise a week, let's make sure that hour is spent doing the right exercise to shift the important internal fat." Professor Bell says many others are interested in Hammersmith Hospital's findings. A Food Standards Agency spokeswoman said BMI was a useful indicator, but stressed it was not appropriate for everyone. She said: "It's not an appropriate measurement for children, younger or older people...or people who have well developed muscles, such as body builders.

"Body shape is also an important consideration."

 

 
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