sfendriel Posted October 3, 2008 Posted October 3, 2008 (edited) Looking for a way to effectively shield magnetic fields, on particular sides of multiple magnets. Would superconductor be most effective? Suggestions? What type would work best? Is there another way? Thanks sfendriel Edited October 3, 2008 by sfendriel
DrP Posted October 3, 2008 Posted October 3, 2008 You can buy magnetic field shielding in metal mesh form. Not sure I can explain it quickly of the top of my head. Type 'magnetic shielding' or something like that into google and have a read around.
Mr Skeptic Posted October 4, 2008 Posted October 4, 2008 A superconductor would be the most effective, so long as you could keep it at about -270 degrees C, and I don't know it it would work against particularly strong magnetic fields.
Gilded Posted October 5, 2008 Posted October 5, 2008 Mu-metal is fine up to a point. And you don't have to mess with liquid helium/nitrogen. How strong are the fields exactly?
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