A freely-suspended magnet will come to rest in a North- South direction -The pole which points to the north is the North Pole -The pole which points at south is the South Pole
It reacts to the magnetic field of the Earth.
A suspended magnet is usually a magnet suspended by a thin thread and allowed to rotate and swing freely. This will align itself to the Earth's magnetic field providing there is no other magnetic or electromagnetic influnence.
No.It doesn't.
Oscillate, wiggle and wobble, turn lazily to and fro, and eventually come to rest pointing roughly north and south.
A freely-suspended magnet will come to rest in a North- South direction -The pole which points to the north is the North Pole -The pole which points at south is the South Pole
When the magnet is free to rotate and its poles are in a horizontal plane, it comes to rest with its poles pointing roughly north and south.
it will rest in the middle of north and south.
it will rest in the north - south direction
It reacts to the magnetic field of the Earth.
A suspended magnet is usually a magnet suspended by a thin thread and allowed to rotate and swing freely. This will align itself to the Earth's magnetic field providing there is no other magnetic or electromagnetic influnence.
A suspended magnet is usually a magnet suspended by a thin thread and allowed to rotate and swing freely. This will align itself to the Earth's magnetic field providing there is no other magnetic or electromagnetic influnence.
Yes. A freely suspended magnet always point in the north south direction.
It can be done with cotton or string if the magnet is not too heavy.
No.It doesn't.
the bar magnet will become stable whereever it is suspended on the north pole as north pole=earth's magnetic south pole
Oscillate, wiggle and wobble, turn lazily to and fro, and eventually come to rest pointing roughly north and south.