Because when you put the north end of the magnet of the north end on the other magnet, or vise versa, it repells, which is when they bounce away from each other.
dont think so but not sure . . . . .
magnets dont lose their magnetism under water. According to me magnets do attract paper under water.
They dont. Go home,
neither. they separate because of magnetic fields. its not kinetic. its not potential. If you hold them together.. the "push" of them trying to get apart is storing some potential energy.. kind of like a spring. I guess you'd call it elastic potential energy because i dont know if there is such a thing as magnetic potential energy... hmm..
Weathering and erosion. Dont thank me, i stayed in school.
they stick together cause of magnetism dah if you dont know then now you do
Yes. If there are two magnets in front of each other, yes. North and North/South and South dont stay together.
cells dont stick together they move together
I dont think you can ---- If you super-heat the magnets, it will demagnetize them, thus stopping the "pulling power" of the magnets. Basically stick the magnets in a vat of super boiling water, that should be sufficient enough heat to demagnetize the magnets.
stick close together dont leave one behind
dont think so but not sure . . . . .
Yes so they dont stick together while boiling.
you could use rubber glue or tie it back together, DONT Stick IT IN THE MICROWAVE!!
Umm I dont No:)
magnets dont lose their magnetism under water. According to me magnets do attract paper under water.
There are no do's or dont's. It all depend on the fish and the situation. Dont get me wrong, dont like poke a stick in the water and hope to catch anything, but other that that , it all depends on the fish and the place
we dont know