In the quasistatic limit, a time-varying magnetic field inside a conductor is governed by the diffusion equation. Despite the occurrence of this scenario in many popular physics demonstrations, the concept of magnetic diffusion appears not to have garnered much attention itself as a subject for teaching. We employ the model of a thin conducting tube in a time-varying axial field to introduce magnetic diffusion and connect it to the related phenomenon of inductive shielding. We describe a very simple apparatus utilizing a wide-band Hall-effect sensor to measure these effects with a variety of samples. Quantitative results for diffusion time constants and shielding cutoff frequencies are consistent with a single, sample-specific parameter given by the product of the tube radius, thickness, and electrical conductivity. The Laplace transform arises naturally in regard to the time and frequency domain solutions presented here, and the utility of the technique is highlighted in several places.
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