Of course
When two opposite poles of magnets are brought together (north and south), they attract each other and stick together. This is due to the magnetic field lines aligning and creating a force of attraction between the magnets.
Magnets stick together when you have two different poles next to each other. The North end and the South end attract, whereas two of the same poles repel. It is a magnetic force or pull that makes them stick together.
Magnets that stick together demonstrate the principle of magnetic attraction by showing how opposite poles attract each other. When two magnets with opposite poles (north and south) come close together, they are pulled towards each other due to the magnetic force between them. This attraction is what causes the magnets to stick together.
No. The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a magnet, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract. actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick
Magnets stick together when you have two different poles next to each other. The North end and the South end attract, whereas two of the same poles repel. It is a magnetic force or pull that makes them stick together.
If they come end-to-end, they will either attract or repel depending on the polarity.If you bring the sides together, they often will slide to bring their ends + & - ends together.
The reason why they don't stick together is because magnets have a positive and negative charge. if you put a positive charge side together with another positive side it won't stick because they are the same charge. if they are opposites they will stick.
The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a Does_north_stick_to_north_for_magnets, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract.actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick It doesn't. A magnet's North will attract another magnet's South and vice versa
if two magnets come together we say they are
It depends what magnets your using. If they're from "Dollar General" they probably won't evn stick together!! It also depends on the quality of the magnets you're using. It depends what magnets your using. If they're from "Dollar General" they probably won't evn stick together!! It also depends on the quality of the magnets you're using.
Yes. If there are two magnets in front of each other, yes. North and North/South and South dont stay together.
A magnet has two poles, called North and South. Take two magnets and stick the ends together. You'll find N-S and S-N stick together (attract). N-N and S-S push apart (repel).