It means that when you put to magnets together they won't touch. They almost push away from each other. The opposite if when you put to magnets together and they stick to each other, this is called magnets being 'attracted to each other'.
Yes, a magnet can repel a ferromagnetic material if the poles of the magnet and the material are aligned in a way that causes repulsion.
Yes, a magnet can repel a ferromagnetic material under certain conditions, such as when the poles of the magnet are aligned in a way that causes repulsion.
The opposite of attract when referring to a magnet is repel.
1) Magnets can attract or repel each other, depending on their orientation.2) Your nail is normally non-magnetic, but when a magnet comes near it, the magnet will induce magnetism within the nail. This will turn the nail into a magnet. Temporarily, and not into a particularly strong magnet, but still.1) Magnets can attract or repel each other, depending on their orientation.2) Your nail is normally non-magnetic, but when a magnet comes near it, the magnet will induce magnetism within the nail. This will turn the nail into a magnet. Temporarily, and not into a particularly strong magnet, but still.1) Magnets can attract or repel each other, depending on their orientation.2) Your nail is normally non-magnetic, but when a magnet comes near it, the magnet will induce magnetism within the nail. This will turn the nail into a magnet. Temporarily, and not into a particularly strong magnet, but still.1) Magnets can attract or repel each other, depending on their orientation.2) Your nail is normally non-magnetic, but when a magnet comes near it, the magnet will induce magnetism within the nail. This will turn the nail into a magnet. Temporarily, and not into a particularly strong magnet, but still.
Not only magnets, but metal repel. There are two kinds of charges that metal contain, positive and negative. If you push a positively-charged magnet towards another positively-charged magnet, they'll repel, maybe because one type of charge needs the other to attract. If this one type of charge comes close to another charge of the same kind, it won't receive what it needs, and feel "resent" to the other charge, then repel. If you push a negatively-charged magnet towards another negatively-charged magnet, they will also repel.
Repel.
They push each other farther away from each other/
an magnet is a object that attracts or repel
Yes, a magnet can repel a ferromagnetic material if the poles of the magnet and the material are aligned in a way that causes repulsion.
repel
Yes, a magnet can repel a paperclip if the paperclip is made of a material that is not attracted to the magnet, like aluminum. The magnet's magnetic field will interact with the paperclip's electrons, causing it to repel.
opposite
Yes, a magnet can repel a ferromagnetic material under certain conditions, such as when the poles of the magnet are aligned in a way that causes repulsion.
The opposite of attract when referring to a magnet is repel.
Like poles repel, opposites attract. So a N pole of one bar magnet will repel the N pole of another bar magnet. And the same applies to two S poles.
the magnet will repel
In magnetism, two like poles will repel each other. Remember that opposites attract.