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Can the London moment be linked in with the Left hand rule? (Yes) I assume that the magnetic field is generated as there is a moving charge within the superconductor induced by the superconductors motion - is that moving charge a by-product of the high conductivity of the superconductor, or is this an effect that can be detected/occurs under `normal' circumstances? (Yes).

Also. Does the effect require the use of a sphere? (NO)

I *think* that the resposnes to my questions (in brackets) are correct - but can anyone else out there provide some explanation or commentary?

ConcernedScientist 11:09, 1 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

See Barnett effect. This of course implies that the effect is not due to the actual motion of actual electrons. If so then it must be a purely quantum mechanical effect.just-emery (talk) 17:12, 3 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

What if a ring is rotated instead of a sphere? If a ring produces a magnetic field then it cant be due simply to the orientation of individual electron spins either. just-emery (talk) 17:16, 3 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

GPB Gyro Speed

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The article says the gyros ran at 4000RPM but this paper http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0264-9381/32/22/224001/meta;jsessionid=E0D57E8307F196B835F3388A3C6BC6D4.c4.iopscience.cld.iop.org says 80Hz (4800RPM).

John Hasler jhasler@newsguy.com 174.125.227.231 (talk) 16:38, 29 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

So the two relevant references to the effect from 1982 and 1990 state that the original theory needed correction then that no theory was working (from the paper 8 years later). I know lots of quantum but this is an aspect of superconductivity I am not expert about. This article seems to need an expert to clarify this. Cechafin (talk) 23:47, 16 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

This has nothing to do with quantum mechanics whatsoever — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:449:8200:A430:89D8:D926:81DB:E6EA (talk) 02:39, 9 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]