Size of a Diamagnetic for Levitation

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The discussion focuses on the principles of diamagnetic levitation, specifically using pyrolitic graphite and rare Earth magnets. A key equation for vertical stability of the levitating magnet is presented, indicating that stability depends on magnetic susceptibility and the gap between diamagnetic slabs, rather than their dimensions. The author questions the effectiveness of using a single particle of diamagnetic material, noting that stability requires more than just one slab due to the influence of the Cz term. There is speculation about the potential energy relationship between the size of the magnet and the diamagnetic material. Overall, the conversation seeks to clarify the conditions necessary for effective diamagnetic levitation.
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Hello,

I have been interested in the problem of diamagnetic levitation where you have typically 2 slabs of some pyrolitic graphite (which is diamagnetic) and between it you have some rare Earth magnet that's levitating thanks to those graphites (and 1 more magnet somewhere above).
I have been looking into a research paper that states that the vertical stability of the floating magnet is achieved when:
K_v = C_z - \frac{1}{2} M B'' > 0
where C_z = \frac{6 M^2 |\chi| \mu_o}{\pi D^5}
M: Magnetic Dipole Moment
B'': double derivative of the magnetic field B
X: Magnetic Susceptibility
mu: Permeability of free space
D: gap between the 2 diamagnetic slabs

It's interesting to note that it does not depend on the dimensions of the diamagnetic slabs at all, rather only on the susceptibility of them and the spacing between them.
So I get the impressions that a single particle of this stuff will suffice... which it obviously doesn't. When there's no slab the Cz term is 0, when there's only one of them its divided by 2. Anyone have any knowledge about this?
 
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I got those equations from this paper:
"Diamagnetically stabilized magnet levitation" by LO Heflinger
Link: http://netti.nic.fi/~054028/images/LeviTheory.pdf

I was thinking it may have to do with some kind of potential energy of the diamagnetic with relation to the levitating magnet, so for example a big magnet vs. small diamagnetic might not work out too well.. i don't know.. does anyone know??
 
It may be shown from the equations of electromagnetism, by James Clerk Maxwell in the 1860’s, that the speed of light in the vacuum of free space is related to electric permittivity (ϵ) and magnetic permeability (μ) by the equation: c=1/√( μ ϵ ) . This value is a constant for the vacuum of free space and is independent of the motion of the observer. It was this fact, in part, that led Albert Einstein to Special Relativity.
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