electricity is used to make the magnetic pull stronger.
Not a separate magnet no. but the current that is created by the electromagnet makes the electromagnet a magnet.
You can make an electromagnet stronger by increasing the number of loops in the coil or by passing more electricity through the coils or by chaging the core to a be replaced by a better conductor.
Either increasing the size of the current (in amps) or the number of turns of wire wrapped around the core will make a stronger magnet. A larger current will make a stronger magnet (up until too much makes the wire melt!). Increasing the voltage forces more current through the electromagnet.
More wire wrappings, Larger Iron core, more and stronger electricity, etc
Increasing the number of coils in a solenoid or an electromagnet will result in a stronger magnetic field.
Increasing the voltage of an electromagnet will make it stronger because the stronger the electrical current the stronger the magnetic field which makes the magnet stronger.
It makes the electromagnet stronger as more power is being passed through it
The strength of an electromagnet is determined by the number of windings, the current flowing through the windings, and the permeability of the core.
The strength of an electromagnet is determined by the number of windings, the current flowing through the windings, and the permeability of the core.
Neodymium
A solenoid is an electromagnet An electromagnet is a solenoid with an iron core
yes it can
The bigger the electromagnet the stronger the strength.
More wire means more electrons with more charge hence making an electromagnet stronger.
Bolt
Bolt
To chew on it.