Yeesss he did! :)
The ancient Greeks understood magnets but since they did not have a source of electricity, they did not use electromagnets. They did make compasses.
Magnets are used everywhere. doctors use magnets for MRI's, Magnet is the the M in the RI. car plants use magnets whule moving pieces, and we use magnets to hang kids pictues on our fridges lol. hope this helped
There is nothing inside magnets. The solid metal has magnetic properties due to it's molecular make up. Magnets are commonly made of iron, but there are more powerful magnets, made from alloys of rare earth metals. The magnetic fiels surround the whole magnetic object.
Lodestones.
Magnets (both permanent and electrical) are used in speakers to reproduce sound so you can hear what it sounds like when doves cry. Magnets are pretty handy in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that show where your brain tumor is. Magnets are used in most electrical motors so your little beanie propeller can spin around. Billions of magnets make a hard drive. You can swipe a magnet across a florescent lamp to relight it. Some magnets help you bring back lost family members. Electromagnets cause embedded structures in liquid crystal displays to rotate leading to a dark area that we call a pixel. You may or may not be a magnet. This may or may not make your life easier.
In 1820 Hans Christian Oersted noticed that electricity could cause magnets to move. This was the first "discovery" of radio waves.
Yes, Hans Christian Oersted discovered that an electric current can generate a magnetic field, demonstrating the relationship between electricity and magnetism. This discovery laid the foundation for the development of electromagnetism as a branch of physics.
♂True...!!▬♂•♫♣ yes
♂True...!!▬♂•♫♣ yes
The Danish scientist you are referring to is Hans Christian Oersted. He discovered that an electric current creates a magnetic field, which laid the foundation for the development of generators and electric motors.
Yes, a fact discovered by a Dane called Hans Christian Ørsted in 1820.
No, magnets do not absorb electricity. Magnets create a magnetic field that can interact with electric currents, but they do not absorb or store electricity.
electronic magnets as they work with electricity produced
Electricity
valuable
No, magnets are not conductive. Magnets do not allow electricity to flow through them like conductive materials do.
turkey