Any electrical conductor only will.
Ah! You're fishing for "electromagnet".
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by decreasing its current,by decreasing turns of coil
Yes. Electromagnets are named only because magnetism is caused because of electric current flowing through.
An increasing electric current moving into an electromagnet will become stronger in its magnetism. As the atoms align the increasing magnetism will stop at one point, making the electromagnet as strong as it can be.
Magnetism is lost in an electromagnet when the electric current flowing through the coil is turned off or interrupted. This interrupts the magnetic field generated by the coil, causing it to demagnetize.
magnetic fieldOnly
the answer is false Permanent magnets will hold their magnetism for a long period of time. Electromagnets will only remain magnetic as long as current is flowing through them.
Yes, an electromagnet is a temporary magnet. It only exhibits magnetic properties when an electric current is flowing through it, and the magnetism disappears when the current is turned off.
An electrical current will cause an electromagnet to energise.
Electric current is the flow of electric charge through a conductor. It produces various effects such as heating, lighting, and magnetism. In electronics, current is used to power devices and transmit signals.
Yes, electricity can easily produce a magnetic field by running current through a conductor. The magnetic field strength is directly proportional to the amount of current flowing through the conductor.
Yes, a wire with no current flowing through it does not produce a magnetic field. Current flow is required to generate a magnetic field around a wire.