Hmm? I thought paramagnetic materials were the magnetic materials. Or at least, they could be made magnetic.
That's what we're taught. If the molecule/atom has unpaired electrons, it's paramagnetic and you can measure that as magnetism.
Like you said, they're basically cases where there are unpaired spins, but not enough to make a strong moment. Paramagnetic materials have a positive response to an applied field; as in, if you put a field of 10 T across a paramagnetic material, you'll get a total field of 10.00001 T out (numbers are woefully exaggerated examples). That said, because the individual moments are so weak, they don't have any exchange interactions with adjacent atoms (i.e. there are no domains, and hence no remnant field).
That said; all ferromagnetic materials are paramagnetic if you heat them up enough (over their individual Curie temperature), BUT not all paramagnets are ferromagnetic if you cool them down. I skipped over the paramagnetic case because it's not generally thought of as magnetic by most people.
While we're on it, a diamagnet is a material that has no net atomic moment. When you apply a magnetic field however, the spins of the paired electrons line up parallel and antiparallel to the field. The applied field then acts on the two orientations differently, resulting in a VERY weak net moment opposing the field. From memory, I think it's something like a 10
-12 order difference in applied field and response. Still, it can levitate frogs if you have a big enough magnet.
There're also ferri and antiferromagnets, but they suck, so I won't go into them.
Pfew, physics. Been a will since I maxwelled.
Any moving electron creates a magnetic field, so the whole spin-is-movement analogy (how right or wrong it may be) works there, too. It behaves as if it was spinning. It's just that it's so small, that in order to create a magnetic field of the size it does, according to classical physics it'd have to be spinning REALLY EFFIN HARD if it actually were spinning. So we just call it spin, and actually have no idea what that "spin" actually is.
Sort of. It works for a simple thought experiment, but the analogy breaks down really fast if you try and do a rigorous mathematical treatment, because of quantum (in the Pratchett sense). That said, my work was more experimental than theoretical, (so I didn't have to worry about it too much) and the times I tried to do it properly ended up flling a whiteboard and going nowhere.
EDIT:
HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK HONKHONK HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK HONK
Hey, Gamzee's a special case. No-one could hate him
Except for Karkat, but hey, that's Karkat.