Yes
Parts that have the same charge will repel. Opposite charges attract/pull each other. So positive sides of magnets attract negatively charged magnets and repel positively charged magnets. Negative sides of magnets attract positively charged magnets and repel negatively charged magnets.
offcourse south pole of a magnet attracts north pole,its the law of poles.But when south pole of a strong magnet is brought near south pole of o weak magnet because strongsouth pole induces weak south pole to do so.
Yes. All magnets of north and south poles. There is no such thing as a magnetic monopole.
The north poles of magnets repel each other, while the south poles attract each other. This is due to the orientation of the magnetic field lines.
magnets repel magnets. a north repels north, south repels south and north attracts south poles
When two magnets are brought close to each other and they try to move apart, we say the two magnets each orher
Not only magnets, but metal repel. There are two kinds of charges that metal contain, positive and negative. If you push a positively-charged magnet towards another positively-charged magnet, they'll repel, maybe because one type of charge needs the other to attract. If this one type of charge comes close to another charge of the same kind, it won't receive what it needs, and feel "resent" to the other charge, then repel. If you push a negatively-charged magnet towards another negatively-charged magnet, they will also repel.
Have north and south poles
A north and south poles.
All magnets have two poles - north and south.
Magnets are very much attracted to each other. Magnets have at least two poles: North and South. North poles attract South, and vice-versa. A simple mnemonic to remember this rule is "Opposites attract."
Magnets are very much attracted to each other. Magnets have at least two poles: North and South. North poles attract South, and vice-versa. A simple mnemonic to remember this rule is "Opposites attract."