Want this question answered?
a copper wire carrying current and another magnet.
No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
The copper, technically, wouldn't increase it's power but rather extend the magnetic field of the magnet.
Faraday found that a wire passed by a magnet induces a current in the wire. This led to making an electrical generator.
Iron is a ferromagnetic metal, and copper is not. Iron will be attracted to the magnet but the copper will not.
move it back and forth infront of a copper wire that is connected to something i dont remember.
A spinning magnet inside a coil of copper wire will produce electricity.
a copper wire carrying current and another magnet.
No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
The copper, technically, wouldn't increase it's power but rather extend the magnetic field of the magnet.
Yes.
The copper wire carries an electric current.
you cannot make a magnet out of copppe unless you run a current through it
Faraday found that a wire passed by a magnet induces a current in the wire. This led to making an electrical generator.
A copper wire carrying current, Another magnet, An iron horseshoeA copper wire carrying currentAnother magnetAn iron horseshoe
what repels to magnets and they only repel to magnets?
Only while the magnet is entering or leaving the loop. If you hold it still, no current is generated. The same goes for a longer magnet where the loop is being moved, but the magnet always remains inside the loop; no current.