Magnetism is the ability of matter to attract other matter to itself. The ancient Greeks were the first to discover this phenomenon in a mineral they named magnetite. Later on Bergmann, Becquerel, and Faraday discovered that all matter including liquids and gasses were affected by magnetism, but only a few responded to a noticeable extent.
The earliest known use of magnetism to inspect an object took place as early as 1868. Cannon barrels were checked for defects by magnetizing the barrel then sliding a magnetic compass along the barrel's length. These early inspectors were able to locate flaws in the barrels by monitoring the needle of the compass. This was a form of nondestructive testing but the term was not commonly used until some time after World War I.
In                  the early 1920’s, William Hoke realized that magnetic particles                  (colored metal shavings) could be used with magnetism as a means                  of locating defects. Hoke discovered that a surface or subsurface                  flaw in a magnetized material caused the magnetic field to distort                  and extend beyond the part. This discovery was brought to his                  attention in the machine shop. He noticed that the metallic grindings                  from hard steel parts (held by a magnetic chuck                  while being ground) formed patterns on the face of the parts which                  corresponded to the cracks in the surface. Applying a fine ferromagnetic                  powder to the parts caused a build up of powder over flaws and                  formed a visible indication. The image shows a 1928 Electyro-Magnetic                  Steel Testing Device (MPI) made by the Equipment and Engineering                  Company Ltd. (ECO) of Strand, England.
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