ZapperZ said:
Magnetic levitation for ordinary magnet is nothing new.
I assume you are referring to
unstable magnetic levitation (which requires additional non-magnetic confinement, active control, diamagnetic material or rotating parts, in order to sustain itself). However, the OP seems to be referring to
stable magnetic levitation, as is exhibited by any magnet above a type
I (and slightly
concave ) superconductor, and which is theoretically forbidden for ordinary magnets.
ZapperZ said:
The reason why such phenomenon are usually done with superconductors is that the magnetic field generated is exceedingly strong for the particular SIZE of the material. A comparable ordinary magnet of the same size typically cannot generate enough magnetic field to hold it up against its weight.
Can you give any reference for that please? (I say it's http://www.coolmagnetman.com/magdonut.htm" wrong.)
ZapperZ said:
Furthermore, to generate stability, a Type II superconductor having flux lines penetrating the its bulk can actually help with this issue.
Yes, that resists horizontal motion, but is unnecessary as levitation is also stable above a concave Type I.
djemboy2 said:
something struck me, the effect of magnetic levitation and suspension, where the magnet is both attracting and repelling at the same time thus keeping the superconductor at the same distance,
I'm not sure that you've interpreted this properly.
djemboy2 said:
i have a feeling that may be an all too familiar case, but surely if you took a neo magnet and fixed it securely to a surface so that its repelling pole was facing outward and then surrounded it with other neo magnets, again fixed securely the surface but with their attracting poles facing outwards, would you not create an area that both attracted and repelled an object at the same time, thus causing anything that was placed with in this field to not only levitate but also overcome unstable equilibrium.?
No. To ever experience magnetic repulsion from below, surely your levitating "object" will be a magnet, right? Now, what's to stop your magnet from flipping over suddenly (it isn't so interesting if you mechanically confine it)? Now, the overwhelming repulsion from below has become an overwhelming attractive force, so what can stop the magnet falling? Even if the magnet didn't flip, the surrounding attractive magnets will only further encourage it to drift to one side, upsetting the equilibrium again. The details aren't always obvious, hence the mathematical theorem.