Diamagnetic Materials: Magnetic Repulsion or Torque?

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When a permanent magnet is near a diamagnetic material, it will always experience repulsion regardless of orientation, as diamagnetic materials induce a like pole that repels. This repulsion is isotropic, meaning it occurs uniformly in all directions. Unlike ferromagnetic materials, which attract magnets and cause them to orient themselves for maximum contact, diamagnetic materials do not exert torque on the magnet to align its poles. The weak nature of diamagnetism makes it less intuitive, as everyday experiences with magnets typically involve ferromagnetic interactions. Ultimately, the magnet will repel the diamagnetic material consistently, without any tendency to reorient itself towards it.
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suppose that i have a piece of magnet close to a piece of diamagnetic material
the piece of diamagnetic material is held still

will the magnet be repulsed isotropically , or will there be a torque exerted on the magnet so that its poles face perpendicularly towards the piece of diamagnetic material?
 
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The permanent magnet and the diamagnetic material will repel each other no matter how they are oriented to each other. If the north pole of the permanent magnet is facing the material, it will induce a north pole in the near side of the object, and "likes repel". If the south pole of the permanent magnet is facing the material, it will induce a south pole in the near side of the material, and again "likes repel". It think your problem is that you are trying to rely on intuition to make a sense of it. But intuition (aka, everyday experience) will not help you out here because diamagnetism is such a weak effect it does not show up in everyday life. You have to go looking for it using lab equipment. Think of diamagnetism as the opposite of paramagnetism/ferromagnetism. Just as your steel refrigerator door attracts magnets no matter their orientation and exerts no torque, diamagnetic material always repels.
 
you are very right about intuition indeed

Based on my experiences of handling magnets so far, they tend to want to orient themselves so that their poles will contact a piece of ferromagnetic material

as in, if there is a thin disc shaped magnet, almost like a coin, where the faces are the poles, when near a piece of iron, it will want to go 'face first' into the iron; the attraction is harder if the magnet was face-on to the piece of iron

now if there was a piece of bismuth , which is diamagnetic, instead... the magnet would want to go away from the bismuth ... following from the effect of inducing a like pole within the piece of bismuth, can i say that the repulsion will be harder if it was face-on , than it would be if it was side-on? and, by extension, if the magnet was facing at an angle from the piece of bismuth, will it tend to reorient itself so that it faces the bismuth piece side-on?
 
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