What is the behavior of real magnets when passed through Stern-Gerlach gates?

In summary: The classical prediction results are similar to the experimental results. But I've seen many presentations (not conclusions from scientific research) that say the magnets will do roughly an even distribution between the two poles.
  • #1
calinvass
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Is there any study involving real magnets behaviour shot through Stern-Gerlach gates?
I've seen something using rather large magnets[1], but still the pattern showed two bulges. I if suppose using very small magnets the split-up would be much clearer. After all these magnets are not simply classical objects, but they consist of particles with quantum behaviour.

[1]
 
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  • #2
Why do you think silver atoms are not "real magnets"? How do you define "real magnets"?
 
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  • #3
Vanadium 50 said:
Why do you think silver atoms are not "real magnets"? How do you define "real magnets"?

Oh, in fact my intention was to delete the word real. There should be an advantage of using small regular magnets (neodymium for example), that would consist of a number of atoms like from 1 micron total size down to even 10 atoms (at this size I suppose we don't need magnetic materials anymore) or less. The advantage is you could literally watch them as the pass through. Silver atoms could do but I'm not sure if you can see their orientation.

If we use for example 1um neodymium magnets the number of atoms oriented in the N-S direction of the magnet is not 100% but is much lower whereas for a single atom the entire field is produced by atom itself.
 
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  • #4
A 1 micron iron ball will have tens of billions of atoms. You aren't going to see QM effects that way.

A 10 atom iron ball is not more visible than a silver atom. I don't see the point.
 
  • #5
There are ways of manipulating individual atoms but I'm not sure if you can make them keep their magnetic moment lined up to their lattice. But I was only interested in some experiments tracking normal magnets.
 
  • #6
I still don't see the point. (See #4)
 
  • #7
In the experiment with real magnets it seems that unlike iron balls, the magnets would separate into two groups. The smaller the magnets, I suppose, the better they would separate. However, electrons can remember states from previous measurements. I don't expect these little magnets to do that.
 
  • #8
calinvass said:
electrons can remember states from previous measurements.

What do you mean by this?
 
  • #9
I mean you can prepare some particles by a measurement for example for up/down axis, then all particles that were found in up state, will be found in an up state on the following measurement that needs to be also for Up/down. "Remember" is not the right word, though.
 
  • #10
calinvass said:
electrons can remember states from previous measurements. I don't expect these little magnets to do that.
I mean you can prepare some particles by a measurement for example for up/down axis, then all particles that were found in up state, will be found in an up state on the following measurement that needs to be also for Up/down. "Remember" is not the right word, though.
This is about as mysterious as the way that the books on my bookshelf remember that I put them there yesterday so they're still there today and will be there tomorrow if someone doesn't take them out. Why would you expect the magnets to behave differently?

And a not completely unrelated question: what is the classical prediction for the behavior of the magnets in that video you posted at the start of the thread?
 
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  • #11
Nugatory said:
This is about as mysterious as the way that the books on my bookshelf remember that I put them there yesterday so they're still there today and will be there tomorrow if someone doesn't take them out. Why would you expect the magnets to behave differently?

And a not completely unrelated question: what is the classical prediction for the behavior of the magnets in that video you posted at the start of the thread?

The classical prediction results are similar to the experimental results. But I've seen many presentations (not conclusions from scientific research) that say the magnets will do roughly an even distribution between the two poles.
http://www.m-hikari.com/astp/astp2011/astp13-16-2011/alrabehASTP13-16-2011.pdf

For the first question, supposing we pass an electron beam through a SG gate oriented up/down (we ignore the Lorentz force). As half of the beam is deflected up, half down, they will separate into two groups. Up to this point the magnets should do the same (the Gaussian distributions will look similar but electrons will be more localised). If we place a second SG gate oriented the same direction and pass the upper beam through , I don't see any reason the magnets will all be deflected upwards as electrons will, because there is no difference between the magnets from the upper beam and lower beam unless you use a SG apparatus that has two identical poles. This way the upper beam will orient N-S and the lower, S-N or vice-versa, depending on what poles we use. But in a experiment the magnets may act like electrons. I suppose it is possible to create a quantum mechanical model (instead of the classical one) that can show what will happen.
 
  • #12
The point is that the classical prediction leads to a continuous spread of the silver atoms due to the thermal initial conditions of the ensemble (in the original Frankfurt setup of Stern and Gerlach's experiment of 1922). The great surprise was that rather they found what was called "direction quantization", predicted by the wrong Bohr-Sommerfeld model, where they were lucky that they didn't predict three lines rather than the observed two without knowing the possibility of half-integer spins yet and the correct amount of the deflection because they didn't know about the correct gyro-factor of 2 for spin-1/2 particles but calculating effectively with spin 1.

A very amusing historical account on the SG experiment, including the importance of heavily smoking cheap cigars in the lab, can be found here:

http://physicstoday.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.1650229
 
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1. What is the Stern-Gerlach experiment?

The Stern-Gerlach experiment is a scientific demonstration of the quantum mechanical property of spin. It involves passing a beam of particles, such as atoms or electrons, through a magnetic field and observing the resulting deflection of the particles.

2. How does the Stern-Gerlach experiment work?

In the experiment, a beam of particles is directed through a region of non-uniform magnetic field. The particles are deflected either up or down depending on their spin orientation. This is due to the interaction between the magnetic field and the magnetic moment of the particle, which is determined by its spin.

3. What is the significance of the Stern-Gerlach experiment?

The Stern-Gerlach experiment was one of the first demonstrations of the quantization of angular momentum, which is a fundamental property of quantum mechanics. It also provided evidence for the existence of spin, a property of subatomic particles that cannot be explained by classical physics.

4. Can the Stern-Gerlach experiment be used to measure the spin of a particle?

Yes, the experiment can be used to measure the spin of a particle. By observing the deflection of the particle in the magnetic field, the spin orientation can be determined. However, the experiment does not provide a precise measurement of the spin value, as it only shows if the spin is aligned in the up or down direction.

5. How has the Stern-Gerlach experiment impacted modern physics?

The Stern-Gerlach experiment has had a significant impact on modern physics by providing strong evidence for the existence of spin and supporting the principles of quantum mechanics. It has also been used in various applications, such as in the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology.

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