I don't see any sketch. But if you break a magnet in two, each part will be a magnet with its own north and south pole.
It falls.
the magnet will repel
it loses its magnetic properties
He had his own dance studio and when they had a break he would sketch them fixing their shoes.
As you break a magnet, the remnant (broken piece) shall still remain a magnet with the same properties and poles. However, there is only so far a magnet can be broken. Visualize a magnet. Now imagine to have a knife that would keep cutting the magnet into half. It will reach a point that cutting the 'magnet' further would yield into a particle with no magnetic charge whatsoever. This is called a magnetic domain. Cutting a magnetic domain further would yield into a charge-less particle as it would be obviously incorrect to state that an atom of a magnetized steel bar would still remain a magnet.
When you break a magnet, the regions where the break occurred become the new North and South poles. This is because the magnetic domains within the magnet align themselves in a way that creates these distinct poles at the broken ends.
The compass needle would be affected by the magnetic field from the nearby magnet. The needle would align itself with the magnetic field of the magnet, causing the compass to point in a direction different from true north.
A current would be induced in the coil.
The tape would hold together, but the recorded material would be damaged.
No, water is not magnetic so it would not be affected by a magnet in the same way a charged comb would attract water. The magnetic field from the magnet would not have any significant impact on the water itself.
It would break.
It would spin.