No magnetism is not matter it is a force of energy caused by perpendicularly(sorry for the big word)aligned poles in specific metals. Magnetism is also caused by rapidly churning metals. Short answer: No
No!The smallest particle in which a magnet still has the same magnetic properties is a called a domain. If you split this domain into other remnants, then that particle shall seize to become a magnet and shall just be a piece of matter
No, but it is only a matter of time before somebody produces one.
A magnet. It is described as a Magnet.
Matter reacts to a magnet based on its magnetic properties. Ferromagnetic materials, like iron, nickel, and cobalt, are strongly attracted to magnets and can become magnetized themselves. Paramagnetic materials exhibit a weak attraction to magnets, while diamagnetic materials are repelled by magnetic fields. Most materials, however, are non-magnetic and do not respond to magnets.
There are not separate north and south magnets; each magnet has both a north end and a south end. These can't be separated. Putting a magnet against a normal (non-magnetized) piece of iron, like the refrigerator, works no matter in what direction (north or south) you put it; the magnetism of the magnet will temporarily induce magnetism in the refrigerator in this case.
A magnet is a solid state of matter. It is typically made of materials such as iron, cobalt, or nickel that have magnetic properties.
no, magnet needs to be close to winding, not touching it
It doesn't matter on the orientation, it is the attraction of the magnet to pull the contact and complete the circuit that matters.
No!The smallest particle in which a magnet still has the same magnetic properties is a called a domain. If you split this domain into other remnants, then that particle shall seize to become a magnet and shall just be a piece of matter
Yes. How else? If it touched Anything other that is matter, it would annihilate.
No, but it is only a matter of time before somebody produces one.
They work becuase it dosent matter what shape the magnet is
Attraction to a magnet is a physical property of matter, not a chemical property. It is based on the arrangement and movement of the electrons within the material, rather than the chemical bonds between atoms. This magnetic property can be observed without changing the chemical composition of the material.
If a bar magnet is broken in half, each piece will become its own smaller magnet with its own north and south poles. The strength of each magnet will be weaker compared to the original bar magnet. The overall magnetic field will be distributed between the two smaller magnets.
You can't. It doesn't matter which end of a cow magnet is North or South. As long as it can pick up metal and the metal sticks to it, then it works just fine.
Yes, for instance each sunspot on the sun is caused by separate pairs of magnetic poles poking through the sun's photosphere. No, no matter how many times you break up a magnet, it will always have a north and a south pole. No matter how small the magnet is.
The most common way is with a magnet and a coil of wire. Have either the magnet or the coil (it doesn't matter which) fixed in place and the other one attached to a membrane that will vibrate with the sound. When a magnet moves past a coil of wire, it causes an electric current in the wire.