No, not all force fields can attract and repel. Some force fields, like magnetic fields, can both attract and repel objects with opposite magnetic polarity, while others, like gravitational fields, only attract objects and cannot repel them.
magnets have to different sides. the negative and the positive. if you put the positive against the positive then the two will repel. but if you put the negative with the positive then they will attract and will stick together. it is all part of science kid. you will learn it in 4th grade. well at least i did......:)
Gravity is a force that attracts all matter.Magnetism attracts only a few elements.
I think that the same poles of two different magnets repel each other because they are not in perfect harmony. They must have the negative and the positive for there to be co-operation. The north for example is the positive and the south is the negative, so one gives off energy and the other need it so they attach. But the opposite poles either push each other away with the excess energy they produce or they go off in seek of the energy they need in another source therefore moving away from each other.
The 3 laws of electric charges; -Opposites attract -Like charges repel. -neutral attract(a positive/negative + neutral will attract) Hope that helps.
The fundamental rule of all electric phenomena is that like charges repel each other, while opposite charges attract each other. This principle is known as the law of electrostatics and governs the behavior of electrically charged particles in nature.
All of the metals attract and repel, but if a: negative and positive come together= attract positve and a negative come together= attract negative and negative come together= repel positive and positive come together= repel
For the same reason that charges can attract or repel each other through nothing, magnets can attract or repel each other through nothing, (and masses can attract each other gravitationally through nothing). Electric and magnetic 'fields' can be felt at a distance without anything to help spread their influence. Light and all other electromagnetic waves are the result of electric and magnetic fields in space.
magnets have to different sides. the negative and the positive. if you put the positive against the positive then the two will repel. but if you put the negative with the positive then they will attract and will stick together. it is all part of science kid. you will learn it in 4th grade. well at least i did......:)
This law was first discovered by Charles Augustin de Coulomb. It explains that all magnetic objects have the tendency to repel or attract to one another. Like charges repel one another and unlike charges attract one another. The attraction or repulsion occurs in a straight line, there is a force between the charges and the bigger the charges the greater the force.
Gravity is a force that attracts all matter.Magnetism attracts only a few elements.
Red does not attract or repel sunlight. Sunlight is composed of different colors, including red, and all colors of sunlight are absorbed by different objects to varying degrees depending on their surface properties, rather than being attracted or repelled by the color itself.
The type of household magnet you are referring to is most likely a neodymium magnet, which is a strong magnet that can repel or attract other magnets. These magnets are commonly used in household items like refrigerator magnets. If one magnet is repelling another, it means they are oriented in such a way that their magnetic fields are pushing against each other, creating a repelling force.
all magnets have a north and south pole. opposite poles attract, like poles repel.
I think that the same poles of two different magnets repel each other because they are not in perfect harmony. They must have the negative and the positive for there to be co-operation. The north for example is the positive and the south is the negative, so one gives off energy and the other need it so they attach. But the opposite poles either push each other away with the excess energy they produce or they go off in seek of the energy they need in another source therefore moving away from each other.
When two magnets are brought together, the opposite poles will attract one another, but the like poles will repel one another. This is similar to electric charges. Like charges repel, and unlike charges attract.
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.
The 3 laws of electric charges; -Opposites attract -Like charges repel. -neutral attract(a positive/negative + neutral will attract) Hope that helps.