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Magnet Experiment: Are Two Magnets Twice as Strong as One?

Nearly everyone has had some fun playing with magnets, trying to pick up different magnetic things, feeling the repelling force when pushing poles together, or even prying strong magnets apart. But how do they work?Magnets create invisible areas called magnetic fields, in which other magnetic things will be attracted or repelled. Magnets usually contain high amounts of the element iron.Each magnet has two poles, the north pole and the south pole. The North Pole gets its name because it is the magnetic north pole of Earth, which is currently near Ellesmere Island in Northern Canada. This means that the north pole of all magnets on Earth point to this location, including the ones on your refrigerator and the magnets you will use in this experiment. The south pole of all magnets on Earth point to the South Pole in Antarctica. The magnetic poles of the Earth gradeually move over time because of the flow of the Earth’s core, which contains a lot of iron.The term “opposites attract” comes from the concept of magnetism: north-south magnetic interactions will attract each other, while north-north and south-south interactions will repel each other. When bringing a magnet near an object that contains a lot of iron, like a steel paperclip, the magnet can lift up the object. Magnetic fields can be combined to be stronger or weaker depending on how they are put together.

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Autor Erin Bjornsson

Categorías 6-8 años, Ficha para imprimir, Experimento/Práctica, Física, Science Fair - Education, Inglés add

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Fecha de publicación 27 / 08 / 2020

Licencia Se respeta la licencia original del recurso.

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Magnet Experiment: Are Two Magnets Twice as Strong as One?

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