A temporary magnet, such as an electromagnet, can only attract materials when in contact with another magnet or when an electric current is flowing through it. It loses its magnetism when the current is turned off or the magnetic field is removed.
You can create temporary magnets by using a material that can be easily magnetized, such as iron or steel, and exposing it to a strong magnetic field. Once the magnetic field is removed, the material will lose its magnetism. Heating the material above its Curie temperature can also demagnetize it, making it temporary.
no
Of course . You can make such a magnet easily using a safety pin. Take a safety pin and magnetize it using a permanent magnet. Then unfold it. The ends will have same poles and at the middle you will have the other. So you can have a magnet with three poles. Verify it using compass.
A magnet is typically made using materials that have aligned magnetic domains, such as iron or certain alloys. While protons have a magnetic moment due to their spin, they are not typically used to create magnets because their individual magnetic fields cancel out in larger objects.
because battery supplies a direct current and to make a magnet with using the electrical method you need to supply direct current to the material {metal}which must be wounded with a coil {solenoid}.
Use the magnet to stroke the iron nail many times and you try to attract something
yes
You can magnetize a piece of steel or iron, by stroking it with one end of a magnet. Stroke in one direction only, lifting off and away between each stroke. This aligns the atoms in a regular direction, in the blank piece of steel.
To make a magnet float using another magnet, you can use the principle of magnetic repulsion. By placing two magnets with like poles facing each other, the repelling force between them can create a levitating effect, causing one magnet to float above the other.
No, but certain properties of gravity can simulated, using a magnet.
hit it with a hammer, stroke it with a magnet or flow an electric current through or closely around it!
Using another magnet to push (same magnetic poles repel), or pull (opposites attract).
A temporary magnet, such as an electromagnet, can only attract materials when in contact with another magnet or when an electric current is flowing through it. It loses its magnetism when the current is turned off or the magnetic field is removed.
The stroking method can make materials like iron, cobalt, and nickel into temporary magnets. When these materials are stroked with a magnet, they align their magnetic domains and become temporarily magnetized.
I guess the easiest way to make it turn quite freely is to can hang it from a string.
You can create temporary magnets by using a material that can be easily magnetized, such as iron or steel, and exposing it to a strong magnetic field. Once the magnetic field is removed, the material will lose its magnetism. Heating the material above its Curie temperature can also demagnetize it, making it temporary.