Abstract
We report here on the reproducibility of measurements on a second-order gradiometer superconducting quantum interference device magnetometer of two different yttrium iron garnet spheres, both having a diameter of 1 mm: 1) the National Institute of Standards and Technology magnetic moment standard reference material (SRM) and 2) a commercial sample. It has been suggested that rotating the sample rod around its axis can move the sample center toward the center of the second-order gradiometer coil. The observed value of the magnetic moment will be theoretically a minimum when the radial offset is 0, and this value will increase in a "quadratic" manner with the radial offset. When the magnetic moment of the SRM was repeatedly measured as a function of rotation angle φ from 0° to 360°, we observed a sinusoidal variation in the measured values. The radial offset dependence of the observed magnetic moment was experimentally confirmed by the measurements of the commercial sphere placed in a hole in several cylindrical containers, wherein the distance between the center of the hole and the center of the container was r. The r-dependence of the minimum from each φ-dependent measurement series is qualitatively consistent with the theoretical curve. When the φ-dependent measurements for the SRM in a capsule were repeated 12× over 21 months, the relative standard deviation of the minimums improved up to 0.1%. Knowledge of these facts will be necessary for the accurate measurement of the magnetic moment of other sample forms (e.g., powders).
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