DocumentCode
964976
Title
Rocks as high-fidelity tape recorders
Author
Dunlop, David J.
Author_Institution
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Volume
13
Issue
5
fYear
1977
fDate
9/1/1977 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1267
Lastpage
1271
Abstract
Ferromagnetic and ferrimagnetic particles in igneous rocks, when they cool from their Curie points, record thermoremanent magnetization (TRM). TRM is a high-fidelity signal: (1) it parallels the Earth\´s (recording) field H that acted at the blocking temperature; (2) its strength is proportional to H for
Oe, the usual range in nature; and (3) it is for the most part impervious to overprinting by later fields, since most particles have switching times
yr at ordinary temperatures. Only the finest particles are overprinted by viscous remanent magnetization (VRM) produced by later fields, and this noise is usually easily erased by AC or thermal treatment. Much of theoretical rock magnetism is directly applicable to DC, AC or thermal recording in fine-particle or thin-film media over ordinary time scales. Topics considered in this review include the thermal recording process, TRM signal strength and its field dependence, thermoviscous overprinting of TRM, erasing VRM overprints, novel methods of magnetic granulometry, and domain structure in particles just above critical single-domain size.
Oe, the usual range in nature; and (3) it is for the most part impervious to overprinting by later fields, since most particles have switching times
yr at ordinary temperatures. Only the finest particles are overprinted by viscous remanent magnetization (VRM) produced by later fields, and this noise is usually easily erased by AC or thermal treatment. Much of theoretical rock magnetism is directly applicable to DC, AC or thermal recording in fine-particle or thin-film media over ordinary time scales. Topics considered in this review include the thermal recording process, TRM signal strength and its field dependence, thermoviscous overprinting of TRM, erasing VRM overprints, novel methods of magnetic granulometry, and domain structure in particles just above critical single-domain size.Keywords
Geophysics; Magnetic tape recording; Ferrimagnetic materials; Laboratories; Magnetic anisotropy; Magnetic recording; Magnetization; Ocean temperature; Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy; Remanence; Temperature distribution; Transmission line measurements;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9464
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMAG.1977.1059698
Filename
1059698
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