Abstract:
The threshold of the magnetic effect on the microhardness of potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KDP) crystals has been found. It was previously shown that the preliminary exposure of such crystals to a magnetic field $B$ for time $t_{\mathrm{m}}$ changes their microhardness reversibly. This effect is well described by the quantity $B^2t_{\mathrm{m}}$; therefore, a decrease in the field $B$ can be compensated by increasing the exposure time. In this work, it has been shown that such a compensation is possible only for fields above the threshold $B_{\mathrm{th}}\approx 0.45$ T, below which the effect is absent even at large exposure times. Both change in the microhardness and the lifetime of the meta-stable state of the crystal are suppressed near the threshold. At $B > B_{\mathrm{th}}$, the effect occurs only when the exposure time $t_{\mathrm{m}}$ exceeds a certain minimum time $t_{\mathrm{m}}^{\min}$ depending on $B$. A physical interpretation of the observed effects has been proposed.