No. What you are asking after is the elusive concept of the mono-pole, which has successfully eluded scientists for about eighty years, if not more.
Plastic can take hundreds to thousands of years to break down in the ocean, depending on the type of plastic and the environmental conditions. However, even when it does break down, it just fragments into smaller pieces called microplastics, which continue to persist in the environment.
Yes, as long as their spins are aligned, they will attract other materials whose spins are aligned, be they temporary or permanent.
When a magnet is brought close to a piece of iron, the magnetic field of the magnet causes the atoms within the iron to temporarily align in the same direction as the magnetic field. This alignment creates a magnetic field within the iron, which then interacts with the magnetic field of the magnet, causing attraction between the two. The iron itself does not become permanently magnetized, it just responds to the external magnetic field of the magnet.
Each piece would become a separate magnet with its own two poles, just like the original bar magnet. Cutting a bar magnet does not eliminate its magnetic properties; each piece will still have a north and south pole.
No, this is not possible. It is just a joke because scientists keep saying California is due to have "the Big One". Well it is possible in billions and billions of years. Plate tectonics are continually moving.
No, not true. If you cut a magnet into pieces, each piece has both north and south poles. Doesn't matter how big or small the pieces are.
yes in the case and most of the drives try it with a magnet just avoid the hard drive with the magnet because these can break them
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.
An egg will break if you sit on it or if some kind of force acts upon it...an egg will not just spontaneously break into pieces.
Yes, it can break or just pieces of it a lot earlier but a new one is created.
break them into pieces after drilling them and just slide them off.
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
no it does not.
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
No, it is not possible to break someone's neck with your hands. The neck is a strong and flexible part of the body that is difficult to break with just your hands.
just wrap a permanent magnet with two layers of cloth at one pole and hold it close to the mixture...the pieces of iron will be easily lifted, therefore seperating them.
He could break his head it is possible or he just falls.