The Curie–Weiss law describes the changes in a material's magnetic susceptibility, , near its Curie temperature. The magnetic susceptibility is the ratio between the material's magnetization and the applied magnetic field.
Above a critical temperature Tc, the Curie temperature, all ferromagnetic materials become paramagnetic. This is because thermal energy is large enough to overcome the cooperative ordering of the magnetic moments.
The Curie-Weiss model is used to model Ferromagnets, which at low temperatures become magnetized but in high temperatures they lose their magnetization. The critical temperature is the threshold when this phenomenon occurs.
This is the famous Curie-Weiss law, which shows that the susceptibility diverges at the approach to the Curie temperature T c. In the ferromagnetic case, the graphical solution (Figure 4 4 3 b) of Equation (4.4.12) gives a qualitatively different result.
The temp folder is not always deleted, even after proper shutdowns, and the space can pile up to large proportions. You don't need to delete the folder itself though, only its content. You can safely select everything, and shift-delete the files to permanently delete the files. It will fail deleting everything and will complain that some files are in use. Just say Ignore for all occurrences ...
In theory, AppData's Temp folder (%TEMP%) is the place for programs to put files that can be deleted immediately after all handles to them are closed. In practice, many programs - including Microsoft's own - violate that guidance.
I wanted to do disk cleanup myself and found a large folder in %localappdata% called Temp. I wondered if deleting the contents of it won't harm my computer. All I know about "temp" folder...