The opposite poles attract and similar poles repel.
Two magnets will attract each other when the opposite poles are facing each other. When the north faces the south, the magnets will pull closer, when they face the same way, they will try to move apart.
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The three rules of matter are - 1. The particles of matter have space between them known as intermolecular spaces 2. The particles of matter attract to each other which are known as the forces of intermolecular attraction . The forces that attract to same particles are known as cohesive forces and the forces which attract to different types of matter are called adhesive forces 3.The particles of matter are made up of small small particles
A formula - if you think to the symbolic representation of a chemical compound - is not a material to be soluble or not. If you think to a material you should consult a chemistry manual, a table of solubility or to test yourself.
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It is when you have the pole north facing up and the pole south facing down they repel. When the pole north and south are facing up or down they attract.
SOME Electromagnet like permanent magnets have two poles(north/south). Likewise the rules for SOME Electromagnets are the same as those of a permanent magnet(same poles repel, different poles attract).
Yes, magnetic poles, like electric charges, can attract or repel each other based on their orientation. Similar poles repel each other, while opposite poles attract. This behavior is a common characteristic of both magnetic and electric fields.
Like poles repel each other and opposite poles attract each other. The magnetic field lines always form closed loops, flowing from the north pole to the south pole outside the magnet and from the south pole to the north pole inside the magnet.
unlike charges attract each other and like charges repel each other. :)
1) Opposites like a Posative and negative attract. +- 2) Same charges means they repel. - <-------> - :)
The golden rule of electrostatics is simple: opposites attract and likes repel. So, if you've got positive and negative charges hanging out, they'll be all over each other like magnets. But if you've got a bunch of positive charges or negative charges trying to get cozy, they'll be pushing each other away faster than you can say "static electricity."
Like charges repel each other, and unlike charges attract each other. Charges redistribute themselves on conductive materials to minimize repulsion or maximize attraction between them.
Two magnets will attract each other when the opposite poles are facing each other. When the north faces the south, the magnets will pull closer, when they face the same way, they will try to move apart.
Opposite charges attract while like charges repel. Electric charges are conserved; they cannot be created or destroyed. Charges can be transferred between objects through friction, conduction, or induction.
Like charges repel each other, while opposite charges attract each other. Charge is conserved - total charge is constant in an isolated system. Charge is quantized - it comes in discrete units of the elementary charge (e).
Like charges repel, unlike charges attract, is what I learned at school. This is true for electric/magnetic charges. Within the atomic nucleus other forces take over, so two protons can live together.