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from LASSP website
There seems to be no etymological link between hysteresis and either hysterical (fr. L hystericus of the womb) or history (fr. Gk, inquiry, history, fr. histor, istor knowing, learned). This is too bad, as there are scientific connections to both words. (There is no link, scientific or etymological, to histolysis, the breakdown of bodily tissues, or to blood.)
Hysteresis loops happen when you repeatedly wiggle the system back and forth (cycle the field up and down). The magnetization of a tape will "lag behind'' as the field sweeps up and as it sweeps down. The memory in the tape is the magnetization remaining as the field is released to zero from a large value. In magnetic tapes, this lag is repeatable: the shape of the loop after the first cycle is roughly the same as it is after many cycles. (This is convenient for doing multiple recordings on the same tape.)
This is not true of many
other systems: forks, for example, after being bent back and forth many
times, will actually become stiffer ("work hardening'') and then break.
There is a class of metals (called shape memory alloys) that can
be bent or stretched plastically large distances back and forth many
times without work hardening: this superelastic behavior is only one
property of these interesting materials.
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