When the north and south magnets face the opposite pole.
Two horseshoe magnets would attract each other when the opposite poles face each other. They would repel each other when the like poles face each other. They would have little effect on each other if they are positioned in a way that the magnetic forces balance out.
Magnets attract when their opposite poles are near each other, creating a magnetic force that pulls the magnets together. This attraction occurs due to the alignment of the magnetic domains in the materials.
Yes, magnets would still work in space to attract or repel objects even without the presence of gravity. Magnets create a magnetic field that can interact with other magnetic materials regardless of the presence of gravity.
A magnet would attract objects made of iron, nickel, cobalt, and other ferromagnetic materials, such as steel. Items like paper clips, kitchen utensils, and certain toys are commonly attracted to magnets.
There are a few metals that magnets do not attract, such as aluminum, copper, and gold. This is because these metals are not magnetic and do not have magnetic properties that interact with magnetic fields.
Two horseshoe magnets would attract each other when the opposite poles face each other. They would repel each other when the like poles face each other. They would have little effect on each other if they are positioned in a way that the magnetic forces balance out.
Magnets attract when their opposite poles are near each other, creating a magnetic force that pulls the magnets together. This attraction occurs due to the alignment of the magnetic domains in the materials.
polar things that can attract iron
Yes, magnets would still work in space to attract or repel objects even without the presence of gravity. Magnets create a magnetic field that can interact with other magnetic materials regardless of the presence of gravity.
It would be more accurate to say that magnets attract iron (but under the Newtonian principle that for every action there is an equal but opposite reaction, if magnets attract iron, then iron attracts magnets, so yes).
because they do !!!!!!! also when north faces somewhere forgot
If you put the north and south poles of two magnets together, they would attract each other and stick together. Conversely, if you put two like poles (north-north or south-south) together, they would repel each other and push away.
magnets dont lose their magnetism under water. According to me magnets do attract paper under water.
Kids might like to know that magnets have two poles (North and South), that opposite poles attract, that magnets attract certain metals but not all, and that magnets are used in the creation of electricity.
If one magnet's North Pole faced another magnet's North Pole, the magnets would repel eachother, meaning they would push away from eachother. If you put a North and a South pole together, however, they would attract, or come together. N+N= Repel S+S= Repel N+S= Attract S+N= Attract Well. I guess opposites really DO attract...
Electro magnets can be used to attract metals temperarily while permanent magnet would be used for compasses.
A horseshoe magnet has a North pole one one of the feet and a south pole on the other. A magnet made of flexible material would collapse on itself as the two poles attract.