The repel force is mostly a little stronger than the attraction. I have succeeded of doing this and the answer I found is repel force. (Some stupid people says that they have equal force but they're wrong)
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.
A magnet is considered polar because it has a north pole and a south pole that attract or repel each other. This polarity is what allows magnets to exert a force on other magnets or magnetic materials.
The force exerted by magnets when they attract or repel each other is called magnetic force. This force is caused by the interaction of magnetic fields between the magnets.
Bar magnets work by having magnetic domains aligned in the same direction within the material. This alignment creates a magnetic field around the magnet that can attract or repel other magnetic materials. When two bar magnets are brought close together, their magnetic fields interact, causing them to either attract (if the poles are opposite) or repel (if the poles are the same).
north pole and south pole attract + south pole and north pole attract because opposites attract. two magnets repel each other when the same poles are pulling together. for example, north pole + north pole repel because they are the same.
Electromagnets are just as "real" as permanent magnets and behave in exactly the same way (as long as there's current flowing through them). So, yes: the north pole of a permanent magnet will attract the south pole, and repel the north pole, of an electromagnet.
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.
A compass will always point to the south pole of a magnet.
It means how two things attract to each other. Such as the North and South pole of two magnets
Two south poles on two magnets will repel each other. A north and a south pole on two magnets will attract each other.
Magnets have invisible forces that attract or repel things. They have two ends called poles - a north pole and a south pole. Opposite poles attract each other, while the same poles repel each other. This is why magnets stick to some things but not others.
Usually magnets attract any iron based metals. Magnets usually only attract or repel other magnets
The repel force is mostly a little stronger than the attraction. I have succeeded of doing this and the answer I found is repel force. (Some stupid people says that they have equal force but they're wrong)
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.
To repel something is to keep it away. To attract something is to draw it towards oneself. "Repel" and "attract" are words usually used to describe magnetism. Magnets have two opposite ends, or "poles", called "north" and "south". When the north pole of one magnet gets close the north pole of another magnet, they repel each other. When the north pole of a magnet gets close to the south pole of another magnet, they attract each other. Chuis attarct is when to magnets push together like the north and south magnet attract. repel is when to magnets pull apart from each other like the north pole and the north pole repel
A magnet has two poles, the north and the south. Opposite poles attract, meaning that a north pole will attract a south pole. Same poles repel; a north pole repels another north pole and a south pole repels another south pole. If two magnets attract each other, that pulls them together, and if they repel each other, that pushes them apart. That is the phenomenon that you observed, of magnets bouncing back when you try to put them together.