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The Stern–Gerlach experiment demonstrated that the spatial orientation of angular momentum is quantized. Thus an atomic-scale system was shown to have intrinsically quantum properties. In the original experiment, silver atoms were sent through a spatially varying magnetic field, which deflected them before they struck a detector screen, such as a glass slide. Particles with non-zero magnetic moment are deflected, due to the magnetic field gradient, from a straight path. The screen reveals discrete points of accumulation, rather than a continuous distribution,[1] owing to their quantized spin. Historically, this experiment was decisive in convincing physicists of the reality of angular-momentum quantization in all atomic-scale systems.
What would happen if the magnetic field used is homogenous?
What would happen if the magnetic field used is only slightly inhomogenous?
If the source is contaminated with particles with zero magnetic moment,
Will it interact with particles with non-zero magnetic moment?
why the moving magnets don't rotate to align with magnetic field, instead of maintaining their original orientation?
The particles would all follow the same (curved) path.
Which direction would they go?
Would this produce the same effect as original Stern-Gerlach experiment?