put them each against the same amount of metal things and see which one gets the most. that will be the stronger one.
yes
Not necessarily.
The strength of a magnet can be determined by measuring its magnetic field using a magnetometer or a compass. The stronger the magnetic field, the stronger the magnet.
both sides (poles) of a magnet have the same magnetic charge
i think the middle
Not if the magnet is symmetrical, and you define 'strength' in terms of flux density.Yes because it has a stronger attraction rate.there is no stronger or weaker for a magnet
Not if the magnet is symmetrical, and you define 'strength' in terms of flux density.Yes because it has a stronger attraction rate.there is no stronger or weaker for a magnet
20000
circular because you can find small circular magnets called "rare earth super magnets" at the store called princess auto
No.The part of the magnet where there is the strongest pull or attraction are called the poles of the magnet.
An electromagnet is a stronger magnet.
Independent of what? A stronger magnet will obviously have a larger "sphere of influence".