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Magnets have two poles, a north pole and a south pole, because of the alignment of their electrons. The electrons in a magnet tend to align in the same direction, creating a magnetic field that has distinct north and south poles. This property is due to the presence of magnetic domains within the material, which align and create a bipolar magnet.
Placing the material in a strong magnetic field will align its' domains. You can swipe a metal tool on a magnet and make it a magnet.
You can hang the magnet up on a string, so that it can rotate freely. In that case, it should align with the Earth's magnetic field.
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.
Magnets always align in N-S direction because the earth itself behaves lika a huge bar magnet. The north pole of the bar magnet attracts the geographical south pole and the south pole attracts the geographical north pole. That is why magnets always align in N-S direction.
yes it does
Magnets have two poles, a north pole and a south pole, because of the alignment of their electrons. The electrons in a magnet tend to align in the same direction, creating a magnetic field that has distinct north and south poles. This property is due to the presence of magnetic domains within the material, which align and create a bipolar magnet.
The electrons of the permanent magnet would align the way the electromagnetic field passed through the magnet.
The fillings align themselves according to the magnetic field created by the magnet. *See the related links to images of the fillings behaving this way, along with a drawing representing the magnetic fields to which the filings align. You can see how the fillings behave similarly in each of the different photos. (see also related question below)
Placing the material in a strong magnetic field will align its' domains. You can swipe a metal tool on a magnet and make it a magnet.
The coil will align itself with the magnetic field (poles) of the magnet.
You can hang the magnet up on a string, so that it can rotate freely. In that case, it should align with the Earth's magnetic field.
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.
Like electrons aligning up. This is the theory of magnetism. It is believed the electrons align positive (or negative), in the same direction creating magnetism. When you pass a magnet across a shaft of a screwdriver, you cause the electrons to align in the screwdriver shaft, creating another magnet.
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.
Which magnet is use to create maximum inductance in coil?Read more: Which_magnet_is_use_to_create_maximum_inductance_in_coil
Magnets always align in N-S direction because the earth itself behaves lika a huge bar magnet. The north pole of the bar magnet attracts the geographical south pole and the south pole attracts the geographical north pole. That is why magnets always align in N-S direction.