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Talk:Magnetic resonance

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Hmm. This disambiguation page is so short, that I will leave a link to magnetic resonance as that. I mean, if you can't remember that MRI is about the nuclear kind, then either you've been following links too much or you're destined to learn about electronic resonance, too. Brewhaha@edmc.net 05:50, 17 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

There are a huge number of magnetic resonance centres and only two are listed here. Presumably we should either list them all (on a separate, linked page) or list none of them. GavinMorley (talk) 21:47, 7 December 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I've looked the links given in this disambiguation page, but couldn't find any clear physical picture of the process of Magnetic resonance phenomena in any of them, all are informative, so understandable to professionals only, in this page, as I've listed, I wish to upload the physical basis its usefulness and it make a complete understanding of other links, I suppose. I'll upload my work before 26.10.14, so I request you to be patient and see what comes new. (-by Suman Chatterjee)

I've revealed a portion of my work today, rest will appear by the time (-by Suman Chatterjee)

Hello,I am Suman Chatterjee, a research scholar in the department of High Energy Phyics at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, situated in Mumbai, India.

I've planned to edit the wikipedia page on Magnetic resonance. I want to proceed by discussing following points -

1. What is Magnetic resonance(i.e. basic physical idea)

2. Mechanism behind this with the help of Quantum mechanics, (here I will use idea of Hilbert space, Pauli matrices, Rotational operator to transform time-dependent hamiltonian to time independent frame, Rabi oscillation, etc; but I will not discuss the details of Perturbation theory.)

3. A brief argument from the point of view of semi-classical theory, and where it differs from quantum mechanical explanation and experimental reults.

4. Some applications of magnetic resonance to various cases, for example- to determine of life time of unstable states,to determine magnetic field experienced by a nucleus inside a molecule or crystal lattice

5. Application of magnetic resonance by Rabi to measure spin magnetic moment of atomic electrons or nuclear spin, an improvement over Stern-Gerlach apparatus. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Suman Chatterjee DHEP (talkcontribs) 06:38, 15 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]