we can find the poles of a ring magnet by tieing thread along the circumference of it
and suspend it with a torsionless string
then it will allign itself according to earth magnetic field
i believe the speed record for RPM's is held by a diametric ring magnet.
On the top and bottom of the ring. If you have several they would join together to form a tube... in a series of north/south connections.
There is one of these 'rings' around the north pole ... called the Arctic Circle ... and another one around the south pole ... called the Antarctic Circle. These circles mark the farthest distance from each pole that can possibly have 24 hours without a sunrise, and 24 hours without a sunset. Each of them is located 23.5 degrees (of latitude) away from its pole. On June 21, the sun doesn't set on the Arctic Circle (the north one), and doesn't rise on the Antarctic Circle (the south one). On December 21, there's no sunrise on the Arctic Circle, and no sunset on the Antarctic Circle.
A magnet can be made in the shape of a ring but the poles run from the front to the back of the ring not around it. However it should be kept in mind that rings such that are worn are generally not made of material that is magnetic.
It's a ring that is the same shape as the widest part of the spherical globe.
All magnets have two poles - north and south.
It depends on the magnet, most of them have poles on the flat faces, but some magnets are magnetised on the outside diameter. this means that if you draw a line across the flat face, the south pole is on one side and the north pole on the other side
i believe the speed record for RPM's is held by a diametric ring magnet.
The short answer is no. Real 9K or more gold is not magnetic, nor is silver. If you find that ur ring or necklace is sticking to a magnet it is plated and is not real.
You can tell if a ring is real gold or not by putting it near a magnet. If the ring is attracted to the magnet it is not real gold, real gold is not magnetic at all.
I would advise use of a metal ditector or a power full magnet
No, the metal ring cannot if it is made out of copper.
melt a magnet and mold it like a ring...hehehe...
bar magnet, horse shoe magnet,ball ended magnet and cylindrical magnet.I recomend doing the iron shavings and bar magnet experiment.x.x TRY IT .There are 3 types o magnets parmanent, temporary, and electromagnets.you can also use water andblue food colloring to create a magnetic field.Bar Magnet, horseshoe magnet etc
They are round. And they are magnetic. Without a specification for the magnet nothing more can be assumed.
hold the compass flat, the needle will point North-South. Twist the outer ring until N aligns with the north pole of the magnet. Turn until you are looking toward whatever you want a heading toward. look over the compass toward the hill, house, whatever landmark of which you want a heading. look at the dial and estimate the bearing of that object.
A magnet will tell you if a metal is magnetic - Gold is NOT magnetic, so if a ring 'sticks' to a magnet it is NOT gold.