The same pole of another magnet.
A magnet will deflect an electric current, the direction in which the force acts is a little complicated. in the presence of a magnetic field, current tries to move in a helical shape (like the shape of a spring).
mirrors
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A material noun is a word for a material, a substance, or an ingredient that other things are made from. Some examples are:cottongoldcalciumconcreteplasticironbrassmilksilverrubbersalttarclothwoodpaperglassleathersand
A material noun is a word for a thing that other things are made from. Some examples are:aluminumconcretecottonflourglassgoldleathersandstonesugarwoodwool
your mother cause she's nobody wants her
A magnet
A magnet will deflect an electric current, the direction in which the force acts is a little complicated. in the presence of a magnetic field, current tries to move in a helical shape (like the shape of a spring).
The movement of Atoms as they attract, move and repel.
No some things repel it like a duck's feathers
battery and a magnet because the ions in a magnet have to be in order for it to be a magnet
SOME Electromagnet like permanent magnets have two poles(north/south). Likewise the rules for SOME Electromagnets are the same as those of a permanent magnet(same poles repel, different poles attract).
some examples are paper clips and iron nails,
Mercury, although it does posses some interesting physical and chemical properties, should not be attracted to a magnet. It is considered to be diamagnetic, which means it would actually oppose a magnetic field and repel. If you have more questions on mercury or diamagnetism.
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.
Not only magnets, but metal repel. There are two kinds of charges that metal contain, positive and negative. If you push a positively-charged magnet towards another positively-charged magnet, they'll repel, maybe because one type of charge needs the other to attract. If this one type of charge comes close to another charge of the same kind, it won't receive what it needs, and feel "resent" to the other charge, then repel. If you push a negatively-charged magnet towards another negatively-charged magnet, they will also repel.
of course some things are impossible