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Can someone tell me if I’m on the right track? Explain why Ferromagnetism is sometimes considered...

Can someone tell me if I’m on the right track?

Explain why Ferromagnetism is sometimes considered to be a special case of paramagnetism.
Ferromagnetism is a special case of paramagnetism in that as with paramagnetism, ferromagnetism moves from an area of weak magnetism to an area of high magnetism when placed in a strong external magnetic field, the atoms align in the direction of the magnetic and creates a strong attraction. Even though with ferromagnetism, the unpaired electron aligns in the same direction as it has a stronger internal magnetic field, while paramagnetic, also unpaired electrons, aligns in random direction due to its weaker internal magnetic field, it is considered similar to paramagnetism in that when the atoms align, both similarly alight in the direction of the strong external magnetic field, leaving ferromagnetic to look similar to paramagnetic.

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