kc, the picture doesn't appear on my browser -- I just get the little 'placeholder' box. so I can't tell for sure what you're interested in making.
I found
this by googling 'nanomanget':
quote:
Conventional magnets act like collections of tiny bar magnets that line up into spirals, due to what scientists call magnetostatic interaction. That means the magnetic poles in a conventional magnet end up pointing in all directions.
At the distance of about 10 nanometers or less, however, the esoterically named quantum mechanical exchange interaction dominates, so each tiny bar magnet lines up in rows. The magnetic poles in nanomagnets end up pointing in the same direction...The fact nanomagnets can have their magnetic poles all point the same way helps make hard disks possible...
Data storage applications count for more than 90 percent of today's nanomagnet market, roughly $4 billion in 2004...In comparison, biotechnology and industrial products make up less than 10 percent of the nanomagnet market.
"Nanoscale objects can permeate biostructures. For example, you can inject suspensions of magnetic nanoparticles into a bloodstream, and have them go through without clogging up vessels. Depending on their size, they can even diffuse through the walls of the vessels as well"
Quotes within the quote are from physicist Denis Koltsov at Lancaster University in Britain.
I find this an interesting topic.

I'm not sure what you mean by "singular linear" field. If you lined up a lot of bar magnets between, and perpendicular to, two parallel planes (where the spacing between the planes is small compared to their size) the resulting magnetic field would behave like a sheet of paper with north on one side and south on the other, analogous to the electric field between the parallel plates of a capacitor. This ignores more complicated effects at the edges.
If by 'singular' you're referring to a
magnetic monopole, an isolated north pole or south pole without its opposite anywhere around, it is classically forbidden and no such thing has ever been found. (This is quite different from electric fields, which do emanate from particles with point-like positive or negative charges.) If you cut a bar magnet halfway between N and S you get two new N-S bar magnets. Keep cutting and the result is the same, in endless regress -- like the water-carrying brooms in
Fantasia 
.
There are superstring theories that postulate a magnetic monopole, which for some reason is predicted to be very heavy -- if it exists.