Well, I'm not entirely sure, but if this helps, one end of the magnet is South (s) the other is north (n). The north attracts the south pole and the other way round. If north Poles or south) are put together they repel each other.
It depends on the type of magnet. Some magnet manufacturers make a magnet more magnetic at the end. It's just how they're made.
get a stick n a propeller n fix them the way that they make electricity is by moving an magnet inside coils of wire so attach a magnet to the inside of the propeller and wrap coils of wire around the magnet but with 1mm of space between. attach both ends of the wire to an applience e.g a light and it will work
You need a strong magnet, a big coil of enameled copper wire, a large capacitor, and an efficient LED. And a few odds and ends. The basic design uses the magnet and coil as a generator, or dynamo. As you shake the assembly, the magnet slides up and down past the coil, generating voltage. You rectify the AC voltage and use it to charge the capacitor. You then discharge the cap through the LED to make light.
Try a magnet!
A variable linearity coil has a coil which is wound around a magnetic core, a permanent magnet for charging a bias magnetic field to the magnetic core, and a magnetic field adjusting coil for adjusting the bias magnetic field. The coil and the magnetic field adjusting coil are respectively disposed horizontally such that an axial line of each of the coils lies perpendicular to lead terminals to which terminal ends of each of the coils are connected. The coil, the magnetic field adjusting coil, and the permanent magnet may be contained in a casing and the terminal ends of each of the coil and the magnetic field adjusting coil are connected to lead terminals which are embedded into the casing
No. A magnet only interfers with magnetic fields ... lots of old IBMs used magnetic memory cards and that's where the stories started. It might erase a floppy disk, but an electro-magnet does the job much better than a perminant magnet.
The opposite ends of a magnet are called poles. All magnets have them.
North and South (Poles) :)
poles
poles
poles
Colours of magnets can differ, but usually the north pole is marked as red and the south pole is marked as either black or blue.
north and south
poles
At the two points or ends on a magnet, called the north and south poles.
The north and south ends of a magnet are called magnetic north pole and south pole. The ends are named such because of the Earth's North Pole and South Pole.
attract
At the two points or ends on a magnet, called the north and south poles.