LARMOR PRECESSION

(Redirected from Larmor equation)
In physics, 'Larmor precession' (named after Joseph Larmor) refers to the precession of the magnetic moments of electrons, atomic nuclei, and atoms about an external magnetic field. The magnetic field exerts a torque on the magnetic moment,
: ec{Gamma} =
ec{mu} imes ec{B}=
gamma ec{J} imes ec{B}
where ec{Gamma} is the torque, ec{J} is the angular momentum vector, ec{B} is the external magnetic field, imes is the cross product, and gamma is the gyromagnetic ratio which gives the proportionality constant between the magnetic moment and the angular momentum.
The angular momentum vector ec{J} precesses about the external field axis with an angular frequency known as the Larmor frequency,
: omega = gamma B
where ''B'' is the magnitude of magnetic field.
A famous 1935 paper published by Lev Landau and Evgeny Lifshitz predicted the existence of ferromagnetic resonance of the Larmor precession, which was verified experimentally and independently by J. H. E. Griffiths (UK) and E. K. Zavoiskij (USSR) in 1946.
Larmor precession is important in nuclear magnetic resonance.

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See also

See also



Rabi cycle

Georgia State University HyperPhysics page on Larmor Frequency

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