
Electrical energy owes its existence to magnetics.
Alaska Magnetics will reinvent the the path to electricity creating greater efficiencies to current designs of energy generating systems. Energy production in the United States is inefficient and polluting. The look of energy is going to change from this day forward. The integration of nature and electrical energy will soon be one. Alaska is the most difficult place in the world to energize and heat. Alaska Magnetics will change that with the greatest natural resource available, that resource is The Alaska Spirit!
 When a design is proven to work in Alaska, there is a great chance it could be marketed anywhere in the world.

A magnet (from Greek μαγνήτις λίθος magnḗtis líthos, Magnesian stone) is a material or object that produces a magnetic field. This magnetic field is invisible but is responsible for the most notable property of a magnet: a force that pulls on other ferromagnetic materials and attracts or repels other magnets.
A permanent magnet is an object made from a material that is magnetized and creates its own persistent magnetic field. An example is a refrigerator magnet
used to hold notes on a refrigerator door. Materials that can be
magnetized, which are also the ones that are strongly attracted to a
magnet, are called ferromagnetic (or ferrimagnetic). These include iron, nickel, cobalt, some rare earth metals and some of their alloys (e.g., Alnico), and some naturally occurring minerals such as lodestone.
Although ferromagnetic (and ferrimagnetic) materials are the only ones
attracted to a magnet strongly enough to be commonly considered magnetic, all other substances respond weakly to a magnetic field, by one of several other types of magnetism. P
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