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High resolution SQUID magnetization measurements in lead nanoparticles are used to study the fluctuating diamagnetism in zero-dimensional condition, namely for particle size d lesser than the coherence length. The diamagnetic magnetization Mdia (H, T= const) as a function of the field H at constant temperature is reported in the critical region and compared with the behaviour in the temperature range where the first-order fluctuation correction is expected to hold. The magnetization curves are analysed in the framework of exact fluctuation theories based on the Ginzburg-Landau functional for the coherence length much greater than d. The role of the upturn field Hup where Mdia reverses the field dependence is discussed and its relevance for the study of the fluctuating diamagnetism, particularly in the critical region where the first-order fluctuation correction breaks down, is pointed out. The size and temperature dependence of Hup is theoretically derived and compared to the experimental data. The relevance and the magnetization curves for non-evanescent field and of the upturn field for the study of the fluctuating diamagnetism above the superconducting transition temperature is emphasized.
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