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Look No Magnets
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a
popular technique used to analyse the properties of alloys,
metal. But it requires large, expensive superconducting magnets.
Now scientists have developed a method that does away with
these magnets. NMR exploits the fact that many atomic nuclei
possess spin and have their own dipolar magnetic fields.
In the new method a chemical sample is polarised by introducing
hydrogen gas in parahydrogen form. The samples NMR is
measured with an optical-atomic magnetometer, at centre; laser
beams crossing at right angles pump and probe the atoms in
the microfabricated vapour cell. Magnetic resonanace imaging
used to analyse human tissues also works on the principle
of NMR.
Source: Down to Earth, June
2011

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