22.1 Magnets
22.1 Magnets
- Magnets are found in all electric motors with uses as diverse as starting cars and moving elevators.
- Magnetic fields can be used in generators to produce hydroelectric power or bicycle lights.
- Magnets are used to separate iron from other refuse.
- Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent each year on magnetic containment of fusion as a future energy source.
- Magnetic resonance imager (MRI) has become an important diagnostic tool in the field of medicine, and the use of magnetism to explore brain activity is a subject of contemporary research and development.
- Computer hard drives, tape recording, and levitation of high-speed trains are some of the applications on the list.
- The Van Allen belts have charged particles trapped in them.
- All of these phenomena are linked by a small number of underlying physical principles.
- iPods would not be possible without a deep understanding of magnetism.
- There are different shapes, sizes, and strengths of magnets.
- All of them have a north and a south pole.
- A monopole is not an isolated pole.
- Iron can be attracted by magnets in a refrigerator door.
- Magnets can attract or repel other magnets.
- Experiments show that magnets have two poles.
- One pole will point to the north if it is freely suspended.
- It is a universal characteristic of all magnets that repel poles.
- It is not possible to separate the north and south poles in the way that + and - charges can be separated.
- There is a thread that points toward the north.
- The two poles of the magnet are labeled N and S.
- The magnetic pole that is near the North Pole has been wrongly referred to as the "North Pole".
- The north magnetic pole should be called the south magnetic pole.
- Unlike poles, poles repel.