no
all magnets have two poles
Yes. All magnets of north and south poles. There is no such thing as a magnetic monopole.
No, a magnet's poles do not have the same charge. One pole is a north pole and the other pole is a south pole, resulting in opposite charges.
A north and south poles.
All magnets have two poles - north and south.
Kids might like to know that magnets have two poles (North and South), that opposite poles attract, that magnets attract certain metals but not all, and that magnets are used in the creation of electricity.
Without poles, it's not a magnet. It's just a bar. All magnets have north and south poles.
all magnets have a north and south pole. opposite poles attract, like poles repel.
Magnets attract specific types of metals such as: Iron Nickel Cobalt Steel Try this: Get a magnet hover it over different objects, see what it attracts and repels (doesn't attract).
all magnets attract ferrous metals (metals containing iron) and the opposite poles of another magnet.
The opposite ends of a magnet are called poles. All magnets have them.
First of all magnes discovered magnets and two like poles of a magnet never attract. you can see the tips of the magnets are the poles they are the places where most magnetic things stick Thanks Gaurang