A substance that is weakly repelled by a magnetic field is called diamagnetic.
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.
A magnet can exert force on a non-magnetic object through magnetic induction, attraction, or repulsion. The non-magnetic object can be attracted towards the magnet or repelled away from it depending on their relative orientation.
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.
When a magnet is placed near a copper material, no attraction or repulsion occurs because copper is not a magnetic material. However, moving a magnet near a copper wire induces an electric current to flow through the wire, a phenomenon known as electromagnetic induction.
it dosent make the magnet stick anymore
A magnetic field. where attraction and repulsion takes place around the magnet.
Magnetism
The force that causes either attraction or repulsion by a magnet
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.
The force of attraction or repulsion between two magnetic materials.
One magnet has two different poles. Thus they attract, and don't repulse, eachother.
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.
it isn't, a magnet contains electrons and neutrons which connect to the electrons and neutrons in metal!
When a magnet touches copper, there is no attraction or repulsion between them. This is because copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with the magnetic field produced by the magnet.
Repulsion from a known pole of a magnet is the ONLY valid test for magnetism.
You're talking about the 'magnetic field', but you're not giving it enough credit.It doesn't only exist in the space around the magnet, but it technically extendsout to infinity, whether or not you can feel it past a couple of feet.