Magnets have two poles north and south.
Like poles repel and unlike poles attract.
Nothing happens, except that now you have two magnets. The poles of a magnet are not actually localized at the two ends of the magnet but are inherent to the magnetic properties of the magnet. As the magnetic properties are not altered by a modification of the magnet such as cutting it in half, there will be no effect on the poles of the magnet.
Answer. Two properties of a magnet are: (i) A magnet always has two poles: north pole and south pole.
Heating the magnet above its Curie temperature and subjecting it to strong external magnetic fields in the opposite direction can remove its magnetic properties.
Yes, the two poles of a magnet have the same atoms and elements. The magnetic properties of a magnet are a result of the alignment of the atoms within the material, not a difference in the type of atoms present in the two poles.
Each piece would become a separate magnet with its own two poles, just like the original bar magnet. Cutting a bar magnet does not eliminate its magnetic properties; each piece will still have a north and south pole.
No, it is not possible to create an all-negative magnet because magnets have two poles - north and south. The concept of an all-negative magnet conflicts with the fundamental properties that define magnets.
No. While electricity and magnetism are closely connected, the poles of a magnet no not correspond with electrical charges.
They are round. And they are magnetic. Without a specification for the magnet nothing more can be assumed.
A magnet is an object that is magnetic if it displays magnetic properties. Think of it like this; If bar magnet attracts a piece of metal towards it, it is using magnetism (fluxuations in electric current) and therefore the magnet can be said to have magnetic properties.
Six. Every bar magnet has 2 poles. If a bar magnet is broken, each resultant piece will be a bar magnet in its own right.
Cutting a magnet in half will result in two smaller magnets, each with its own north and south poles. This happens because the magnetic properties are not lost when the magnet is cut.
Inside a magnet, there are tiny particles called atoms that have their own magnetic fields. These atoms align in the same direction, creating a magnetic field that gives the magnet its magnetic properties.