no as the broken will repeal as they form same poles
The magnetism of a permanent magnet is caused by the magnetic alignement of individual atoms in the crystal structure of the ferromagnetic material. You can break a magnet into thousands of pieces and each tiny piece is a magnet with north and south poles. Each piece will attract or repel any of the other pieces depending on how they are oriented to one another.
A material that attracts small pieces of iron is called a magnet. Magnets have magnetic properties that allow them to attract iron and other magnetic materials.
by the force of attraction in magnet their pieces will re join wd each other. All the broken pieces will become separate individual magnets.
In most cases yes.
7
Not exactly. All pieces of the magnet retain their ferrous properties, but if they were (for example) dropped, then the shock of the fall could potentially make them lose a bit of magnetism. Extreme temperature changes and high power electric discharges could also decrease the power of the magnet.
One commonly used method to separate aluminium pieces from salt is by using a magnet. Since aluminium is not magnetic, the magnet can attract and separate the aluminium pieces from the salt. Another method is to dissolve the salt in water and then use filtration to separate the larger aluminium pieces from the saltwater solution.
It is so far experimentally impossible to separate the North Pole from the South Pole. Even if you cut the magnet into little pieces, it'll still remain a magnet because there will still be a North pole and a South Pole
Source: An excerpt from Montage: An Anthology in Philippine Literature in English ACTIVITY 1 ACTIVITY 2 Complete the table below based from the selection above. Filipino Traits or Values Mentioned in the story Significant Impact on others Past Then and Now
Yes, a magnet can be used to separate small pieces of ferromagnetic metal from a mixture of metal. The magnet will attract the ferromagnetic metal pieces, allowing them to be easily separated from the rest of the mixture.
When a magnet or iron piece is watched under a powerful microscope we will obseve that a magnet or iron is made up tiny tiny pieces which cannot be further divided realistically such small pieces are known as domains. In a magnet all domains are in the same direction due to which it attracts iron. While in a iron these domains are arranged randomly which nullify its magnetism. When a magnet is brousht near an iron matrial all the domains get attracted to the magnet due to which domains in iron get arranged in a particular direction due to wich at that time they act as magnets but as soon as the magnet gets farther the domains again arrange them selves randomly due to which tey do not remain permanent magnets
If you hold the end of one (A) to the center of the other (B), one of two things will happen. Either A will attract B, in which case A is the magnet, or it won't, which makes B the magnet. The secret lies in the fact that a magnet is just as attracted to the center of an iron piece, but a piece of unmagnetized iron will have no attraction to the center of a magnet-- they are magnetic off the ends, and the center is neutral.