If you put the north and the south poles of two magnets together they will attract each other.
By,
Fatema Aftab
If two south poles of magnets are held together, they will repel each other. This is because like poles (south-south or north-north) repel each other due to the magnetic field they create.
It is not possible to create a magnet with two south poles or two north poles. Both the poles always exist along with each other. Force 2 magnets together end to end with the south poles together. You will get a north pole at each end and a big south pole in the middle. This arrangement is called a quadrupole.
If you placed two magnets with their north poles end to end they would repel each other.
Two magnets may not stick together if their poles are aligned in opposite directions (north to south or south to north), causing them to repel each other due to the magnetic force. The magnetic force works in a way that like poles repel each other and opposite poles attract each other.
No, magnets can only have two poles: a north pole and a south pole. This is a fundamental property of magnets based on their internal magnetic field alignment.
When the poles of two magnets are brought close together, they can either attract or repel each other depending on their alignment. Opposite poles (north and south) attract, pulling the magnets together, while like poles (north and north or south and south) repel, pushing the magnets apart. This interaction is a fundamental principle of magnetism and is governed by the magnetic field generated by each magnet.
when the magnets repel they have the same poles facing each other. Like if you hold two north side pole together they will repel.
When the north poles of two bar magnets are brought close together, they will repel each other. This is due to the magnetic principle that like poles repel while opposite poles attract. As a result, the magnets will push away from each other instead of coming together.
When you join the same poles of two magnets together (north to north or south to south), they will repel each other and push away. This is because like poles of a magnet repel each other due to their magnetic fields.
Magnets have two poles, north and south. When two magnets with opposite poles (north and south) are brought close together, they attract each other. However, when two magnets with the same poles (north and north, or south and south) are brought close together, they repel each other. This is because like poles repel and opposite poles attract due to the magnetic field lines interacting.
If two south poles of magnets are held together, they will repel each other. This is because like poles (south-south or north-north) repel each other due to the magnetic field they create.
When two magnets are brought together, they can either attract each other if their poles are opposite (North and South) or repel each other if their poles are the same (North and North, or South and South). This attraction or repulsion is due to the magnetic fields surrounding the magnets interacting with each other.
Magnets stick together when you have two different poles next to each other. The North end and the South end attract, whereas two of the same poles repel. It is a magnetic force or pull that makes them stick together.
When magnets repel, it means that the same poles (north-north or south-south) are facing each other, creating a force that pushes them apart. When magnets attract, it means that opposite poles (north-south) are facing each other, creating a force that pulls them together.
Yes. All magnets of north and south poles. There is no such thing as a magnetic monopole.
Magnets and magnetic objects are pulled together by magnetic force, which is caused by the alignment of their magnetic fields. This attraction is strongest at the poles of magnets and weaker as you move away from the poles.
When two opposite poles of magnets are brought together (north and south), they attract each other and stick together. This is due to the magnetic field lines aligning and creating a force of attraction between the magnets.