Fundamentally, contributions to any system's magnetic moment may come from sources of two kinds: 1) motion of
electric charges, such as
electric currents; and 2) the intrinsic magnetism due to
spin of
elementary particles, such as the
electron. Contributions due to the sources of the first kind can be calculated from knowing the distribution of all the electric currents (or, alternatively, of all the electric charges and their velocities) inside the system, by using the formulas below. Contributions due to particle spin sum the
magnitude of each elementary particle's intrinsic magnetic moment, a fixed number, often measured experimentally to a great precision. For example, any electron's magnetic moment is measured to be . The
direction of the magnetic moment of any elementary particle is entirely determined by the direction of its
spin, with the
negative value indicating that any electron's magnetic moment is antiparallel to its spin. The net magnetic moment of any system is a
vector sum of contributions from one or both types of sources. For example, the magnetic moment of an atom of
hydrogen-1 (the lightest hydrogen isotope, consisting of a proton and an electron) is a vector sum of the following contributions: • the intrinsic moment of the electron, • the orbital motion of the electron around the proton, • the intrinsic moment of the proton. Similarly, the magnetic moment of a
bar magnet is the sum of the contributing magnetic moments, which include the intrinsic and orbital magnetic moments of the unpaired
electrons of the magnet's material and the nuclear magnetic moments.
Magnetic moment of an atom For an atom, individual electron spins are added to get a total spin, and individual orbital angular momenta are added to get a total orbital angular momentum. These two then are added using
angular momentum coupling to get a total angular momentum. For an atom with no nuclear magnetic moment, the magnitude of the atomic dipole moment, \mathfrak m_\text{atom}, is then \mathfrak m_\text{atom} = g_\text{J}\,\mu_\text{B}\,\sqrt{j\,(j+1)\,} where is the
total angular momentum quantum number, is the
Landé -factor, and is the
Bohr magneton. The component of this magnetic moment along the direction of the magnetic field is then \mathfrak m_{\text{atom},z} = -m\,g_\text{J}\,\mu_\text{B} \, . The negative sign occurs because electrons have negative charge. The
integer (not to be confused with the moment, \mathfrak m) is called the
magnetic quantum number or the
equatorial quantum number, which can take on any of values: -j,\ -(j-1),\ \cdots,\ -1,\ 0,\ +1,\ \cdots,\ +(j-1),\ +j~. Due to the angular momentum, the dynamics of a magnetic dipole in a magnetic field differs from that of an electric dipole in an electric field. The field does exert a torque on the magnetic dipole tending to align it with the field. However, torque is proportional to rate of change of angular momentum, so
precession occurs: the direction of spin changes. This behavior is described by the
Landau–Lifshitz–Gilbert equation: \frac{1}{\gamma} \frac{\mathrm d\mathbf{m}}{\mathrm dt} = \mathbf{m} \times \mathbf{H}_\text{eff} - \frac{\lambda}{\gamma m} \mathbf{m} \times \frac{\mathrm d\mathbf{m}}{\mathrm dt} where is the
gyromagnetic ratio, is the magnetic moment, is the damping coefficient and is the effective magnetic field (the external field plus any self-induced field). The first term describes precession of the moment about the effective field, while the second is a damping term related to dissipation of energy caused by interaction with the surroundings.
Magnetic moment of an electron Electrons and many elementary particles also have intrinsic magnetic moments, an explanation of which requires a quantum mechanical treatment and relates to the intrinsic
angular momentum of the particles as discussed in the article
Electron magnetic moment. It is these intrinsic magnetic moments that give rise to the macroscopic effects of
magnetism, and other phenomena, such as
electron paramagnetic resonance. The magnetic moment of the electron is \mathbf{m}_\text{S} = -\frac{g_\text{S} \mu_\text{B} \mathbf{S}}{\hbar}, where Bohr magneton| is the
Bohr magneton, is electron
spin, and the
g-factor is 2 according to
Dirac's theory, but due to
quantum electrodynamic effects it is slightly larger in reality: . The deviation from 2 is known as the
anomalous magnetic dipole moment. Again it is important to notice that is a negative constant multiplied by the
spin, so the magnetic moment of the electron is antiparallel to the spin. This can be understood with the following classical picture: if we imagine that the spin angular momentum is created by the electron mass spinning around some axis, the electric current that this rotation creates circulates in the opposite direction, because of the negative charge of the electron; such current loops produce a magnetic moment which is antiparallel to the spin. Hence, for a positron (the anti-particle of the electron) the magnetic moment is parallel to its spin.
Magnetic moment of a nucleus The nuclear system is a complex physical system consisting of nucleons, i.e.,
protons and
neutrons. The quantum mechanical properties of the nucleons include the spin among others. Since the electromagnetic moments of the nucleus depend on the spin of the individual nucleons, one can look at these properties with measurements of nuclear moments, and more specifically the nuclear magnetic dipole moment. Most common nuclei exist in their
ground state, although nuclei of some
isotopes have long-lived
excited states. Each
energy state of a nucleus of a given isotope is characterized by a well-defined magnetic dipole moment, the magnitude of which is a fixed number, often measured experimentally to a great precision. This number is very sensitive to the individual contributions from nucleons, and a measurement or prediction of its value can reveal important information about the content of the nuclear wave function. There are several theoretical models that predict the value of the magnetic dipole moment and a number of experimental techniques aiming to carry out measurements in nuclei along the nuclear chart.
Magnetic moment of a molecule Any molecule has a well-defined magnitude of magnetic moment, which may depend on the molecule's
energy state. Typically, the overall magnetic moment of a molecule is a combination of the following contributions, in the order of their typical strength: • magnetic moments due to its unpaired
electron spins (
paramagnetic contribution), if any • orbital motion of its electrons, which in the
ground state is often proportional to the external magnetic field (
diamagnetic contribution) • the combined magnetic moment of its
nuclear spins, which depends on the
nuclear spin configuration.
Examples of molecular magnetism • The
dioxygen molecule, O, exhibits strong
paramagnetism, due to unpaired spins of its outermost two electrons. • The
carbon dioxide molecule, CO, mostly exhibits
diamagnetism, a much weaker magnetic moment of the electron
orbitals that is proportional to the external magnetic field. The nuclear magnetism of a magnetic
isotope such as C or O will contribute to the molecule's magnetic moment. • The
dihydrogen molecule, H, in a weak (or zero) magnetic field exhibits nuclear magnetism, and can be in a
para- or an
ortho- nuclear spin configuration. • Many transition metal complexes are magnetic. The spin-only formula is a good first approximation for high-spin complexes of first-row
transition metals.
Elementary particles In atomic and nuclear physics, the Greek symbol represents the
magnitude of the magnetic moment, often measured in Bohr magnetons or
nuclear magnetons, associated with the intrinsic spin of the particle and/or with the orbital motion of the particle in a system. Values of the intrinsic magnetic moments of some particles are given in the table below: == See also ==