If you're talking magnets, then yes.
Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.
north pole and south pole attract + south pole and north pole attract because opposites attract. two magnets repel each other when the same poles are pulling together. for example, north pole + north pole repel because they are the same.
There are 2 poles of magnet one is like pole and the other is unlike pole one has north pole in it and the other has south pole in it. South snd south pole of 2 magnets would never attract where as the same goes with north pole as well.North and south pole would always attract.
No, the south pole itself does not attract magnets. Magnets are always attracted to the opposite pole of another magnet, so the south pole of a magnet would be attracted to the north pole of the Earth's magnetic field.
It is when you have the pole north facing up and the pole south facing down they repel. When the pole north and south are facing up or down they attract.
It has 2 Poles the North Pole and the South Pole . Extra Info . : Like Poles repel where as unlike Poles attract .
North pole. The north pole of a compass needle has "S" on it, and the south pole of the needle has "N" on it. Opposites attract, similar poles repel.
magnetic north north pole =magnetic south
The North Pole of a magnet is traditionally considered the "north" end because it is attracted to the Earth's geographic North Pole, which is actually a magnetic south pole. In magnetism, opposite poles attract, so the North Pole of a magnet is a magnetic north pole, while the Earth's North Pole behaves like a magnetic south pole. Therefore, the North Pole of a magnet is not "plus" but is simply referred to as the North Pole.
It takes about 12,450.5 miles from the north pole to the south pole or south pole to north pole.
The geographic north pole behaves as a magnetic south pole because opposite magnetic poles attract each other. This means that the north-seeking pole of a compass needle (which is used to determine direction) points toward the magnetic north pole, which is near the geographic north pole. Thus, the geographic north pole is essentially a magnetic south pole in terms of magnetism.
A magnet has two poles, the north and the south. Opposite poles attract, meaning that a north pole will attract a south pole. Same poles repel; a north pole repels another north pole and a south pole repels another south pole. If two magnets attract each other, that pulls them together, and if they repel each other, that pushes them apart. That is the phenomenon that you observed, of magnets bouncing back when you try to put them together.