yes
when the magnets repel they have the same poles facing each other. Like if you hold two north side pole together they will repel.
Two alike magnets repel because of the way that the magnetic force flows from each Pole.
When the opposite poles of two bar magnets are facing each other, they will attract. When magnets have the same pole facing each other, they will repel.
No, two south poles will repel each other.
north pole and south pole attract + south pole and north pole attract because opposites attract. two magnets repel each other when the same poles are pulling together. for example, north pole + north pole repel because they are the same.
all magnets have a north and south pole. opposite poles attract, like poles repel.
Of course not! A magnet's poles are named after the directions in which they face when suspended.
To repel something is to keep it away. To attract something is to draw it towards oneself. "Repel" and "attract" are words usually used to describe magnetism. Magnets have two opposite ends, or "poles", called "north" and "south". When the north pole of one magnet gets close the north pole of another magnet, they repel each other. When the north pole of a magnet gets close to the south pole of another magnet, they attract each other. Chuis attarct is when to magnets push together like the north and south magnet attract. repel is when to magnets pull apart from each other like the north pole and the north pole repel
If you put two south pole magnets together, they would repel each other (the force would push the two magnets away from each other). Only north pole and south pole attract each other. Short answer- you would have a hard time getting the two south poles to touch! Hope this helped! =D
A compass will always point to the south pole of a magnet.
Two south poles on two magnets will repel each other. A north and a south pole on two magnets will attract each other.
Electromagnets are just as "real" as permanent magnets and behave in exactly the same way (as long as there's current flowing through them). So, yes: the north pole of a permanent magnet will attract the south pole, and repel the north pole, of an electromagnet.