EXPERIMENT 39
40
WHAT’S HAPPENING
Two magnets connected together
behave just like one single magnet
with two poles. In the area where
they touch, on the other hand, their
magnetic force disappears.
When you pull them apart, though,
it reappears. The same thing hap-
pens when you actually saw a
magnet in half: You get smaller
and smaller magnets, each with
two poles.
Disappearing poles
Each of your magnets has a north pole
and a south pole. Do you think you could
ever find just a north or a south pole by
itself, or do they only come in pairs?
HERE’S HOW
Attach the two bar magnets to each other
by bringing the opposite poles together.
Now test to see where the areas of stron-
gest magnetic force are. What can you
determine?
Pull the magnets apart and test them
again. Repeat the experiment with the
ring magnets.
WHY DOES A
MAGNET
ATTRACT IRON,
OF ALL THINGS?
It’s because iron con-
sists of countless tiny
magnets, due to its spe-
cial atomic structure.
These so-called molec-
ular magnets are nor-
mally all jumbled up,
so their individual mag-
netic forces cancel each
other out.
When they happen to
get close to another
magnet, they all line up
in the same direction.
That’s how a piece of
iron will temporarily
turn into a magnet as
well — and these two
magnets will attract
each other.
Содержание Electricity and Magnetism 620417
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