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No. The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a magnet, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract. actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick
north and north or south and south (red, red) (blue, blue)
The needle in compasses is magnetic and is drawn to the Earth's magneticism in the North. When the needle is placed near a metal, as all magnets are, attracted to metals.
A magnet has two poles, the north and the south. Opposite poles attract, meaning that a north pole will attract a south pole. Same poles repel; a north pole repels another north pole and a south pole repels another south pole. If two magnets attract each other, that pulls them together, and if they repel each other, that pushes them apart. That is the phenomenon that you observed, of magnets bouncing back when you try to put them together.
When two of the same poles are brought together they will repel each other. When opposite poles are brought together they attract. Your question was a little unclear, so I hope this helps.
the poles on a magnet help to explain why magnets can stick together.the north pole will stick into the north pole.the magnetic forces of each magnet are moving in the same direction.
If you placed two magnets with their north poles end to end they would repel each other.
As you move them closer and closer together, the repellent force between them will get stronger and stronger.
Think about what happens when two magnets with a north pole are brought together. Ig becomes harder and harder to bring them together as the distance between them decrease. The last inch seems impossible no matter how hard you try. That's what happens when positive charges are brought together.
when the magnets repel they have the same poles facing each other. Like if you hold two north side pole together they will repel.
Yes. If there are two magnets in front of each other, yes. North and North/South and South dont stay together.
This is because magnets have north and south poles, which attract and repel each other. Opposite sides of the magnet attract each other like a south pole of the magnet touching the north pole of another magnet, while the same sides of a magnet like a north pole of one magnet touching a north pole from another magnet.
No. The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a magnet, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract. actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick
You get a bunch of smaller magnets and you will still have north pole.
north and north or south and south (red, red) (blue, blue)
When two magnets are brought together, the opposite poles will attract one another, but the like poles will repel one another. This is similar to electric charges. Like charges repel, and unlike charges attract.
magnets repel magnets. a north repels north, south repels south and north attracts south poles