You would have to study Quantum Electrodynamics to understand that. Also given that magnetism is what happens when you apply relativity to electric fields, you would have to understand relativity.
That beings said, the attraction has its roots in the fact that in electrostatics "like charges repel and unlike charges attract" The same ends up holding true for positive and negative magnetic poles.
It is also related to the fact that when you have two parallel conductors and their currents are in the same direction, they attract, when the currents are in the opposite direction, they repel.
When looking at magnetic field lines think of them as elastic bands wanting to shrink.
In the related links is a page that discusses it.
Yes, because they have complementary magnetic fields.
Yes. The "north pole" of one magnet will attract the "south pole" of another. Opposite charges attract, likecharges repel.
They will stick to each other like a maganet
They attract.
Same poles attract where as opposite poles repel. N-N= repel N-S=attract S-N=attract S-S=repel
Like poles repel each other, while opposite poles attract each other.
In magnetism, opposite poles will always attract each other.
Like poles repel and unlike poles attract and keep 'um away from your pacemaker.
No, unlike poles of a magnet attract each other I'm so smart HA HA HA HA Bye Bye Byeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
no
Same poles attract where as opposite poles repel. N-N= repel N-S=attract S-N=attract S-S=repel
Opposite poles attract one another. Poles of the same charge repel each other.
No, its opposite. Similar poles repel while dissimilar poles attract each other.
Like poles repel each other, while opposite poles attract each other.
In magnetism, opposite poles will always attract each other.
They push away from each other
We know that like magnetic poles repel and opposite magnetic poles attract. North will repel north and south will repel south. On the other hand, north and south attract each other.
Opposite poles will attract each other. Look at the related link for a field picture of like charges.
Like poles repel and unlike poles attract and keep 'um away from your pacemaker.
Yes. Like poles repel, and opposite poles attract. In electrostatics, like charges repel, and opposite charges attract.
Like poles attract. Unlike poles repel. So north and south will attract towards each other, while north and north (and south to south) will repel.