Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q217121> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 52 of
52
with 100 triples per page.
- Q217121 subject Q8595489.
- Q217121 subject Q8614236.
- Q217121 abstract "Not to be confused with ferromagnetism; for an overview see magnetismIn physics, a ferrimagnetic material is one that has populations of atoms with opposing magnetic moments, as in antiferromagnetism; however, in ferrimagnetic materials, the opposing moments are unequal and a spontaneous magnetization remains. This happens when the populations consist of different materials or ions (such as Fe2+ and Fe3+).Ferrimagnetism is exhibited by ferrites and magnetic garnets. The oldest known magnetic substance, magnetite (iron(II,III) oxide; Fe3O4), is a ferrimagnet; it was originally classified as a ferromagnet before Néel's discovery of ferrimagnetism and antiferromagnetism in 1948.Some ferrimagnetic materials are YIG (yttrium iron garnet), cubic ferrites composed of iron oxides and other elements such as aluminum, cobalt, nickel, manganese and zinc, hexagonal ferrites such as PbFe12O19 and BaFe12O19, and pyrrhotite, Fe1-xS.".
- Q217121 thumbnail Ferrimagnetic_ordering.svg?width=300.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q105368.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q108193.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q11369.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q127995.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q1483165.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q155781.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q161254.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q162869.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q181395.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q184207.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q188479.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q190444.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q191073.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q1934296.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q19588.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q242657.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q286406.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q3294789.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q36496.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q413.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q421944.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q466686.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q4765462.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q5105088.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q5121676.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q575224.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q629.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q663.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q677.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q677197.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q7098845.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q7100077.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q721849.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q731.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q740.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q744.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q7579060.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q758.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q853422.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q856711.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q8595489.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q8614236.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q909701.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q918398.
- Q217121 wikiPageWikiLink Q962002.
- Q217121 comment "Not to be confused with ferromagnetism; for an overview see magnetismIn physics, a ferrimagnetic material is one that has populations of atoms with opposing magnetic moments, as in antiferromagnetism; however, in ferrimagnetic materials, the opposing moments are unequal and a spontaneous magnetization remains. This happens when the populations consist of different materials or ions (such as Fe2+ and Fe3+).Ferrimagnetism is exhibited by ferrites and magnetic garnets.".
- Q217121 label "Ferrimagnetism".
- Q217121 depiction Ferrimagnetic_ordering.svg.