Magnetic Effects on Electrolyte Solutions in Pulse and Alternating Fields
β Scribed by Jun Oshitani; Ryosuke Uehara; Ko Higashitani
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 94 KB
- Volume
- 209
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The contribution of the pulse and alternating magnetic fields on the magnetic effects is examined and compared with that of the static field, using a rotational device by which the pulse and alternating fields are able to be applied to the stationary sample. The followings are found: (i) the substantial time required to reach the maximum magnetic effect in the pulse and alternating fields is much smaller than the time in the static field, (ii) the magnetic effect does depend on the frequency of magnetic field, and (iii) the pulse and alternating magnetic fields make the quasi-stable structure more stable than the static field. The results are discussed and compared with the magnetic effects in flow loops reported elsewhere.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Static magnetic fields affect the diffusion of biological particles in solutions through the Lorentz force and Maxwell stress. These effects were analyzed theoretically to estimate the threshold field strength for these effects. Our results show that the Lorentz force suppresses the diffusion of cha
Abstract&Experiments using modified fritted glass diaphragm-cell method show that an externally applied magnetic field of 5 kG strength influences the integral diffusion coefficient of HCI (measured at WC and at ambient pressure) in 0.01, 0.05, 0.5, I.0 and 1.5 N H&H,0 solution.
## Abstract Review: 109 refs.
Combined parallel static and alternating magnetic fields cause a rapid change in the ionic current flowing through an aqueous glutamic acid solution when the alternating field frequency is equal to the cyclotron frequency. The current peak is 20-30% of the background direct current. The peak is obse
analyzed sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) frequencies as an indicator of DNA damage induc,ed in human lymphocytes in vitro by a lowlevel pulsed electromagnetic field. We studied the effect of low-level pulsed electromagnetic fields on human chromosomes with the cy'iogenetic assay of sister chromati