What is a Magnet?
A
magnet is an object made of certain materials which create a magnetic field.
Every magnet has at least one north pole and one south pole. By convention, we say that the magnetic field
lines leave the North end of a magnet and enter the South end of a magnet. If you take a bar magnet and break it into two pieces, each piece will again
have a North pole and a South pole. If you take one of those pieces and break
it into two, each of the smaller pieces will have a North pole and a South
pole. No matter how small the pieces of the magnet become, each piece will have
a North pole and a South pole. It has not been shown to be possible to end up
with a single North pole or a single South pole which is a monopole
("mono" means one or single, thus one pole).
Magnets
are available in all sorts of shapes including discs, rings, blocks,
rectangles, arcs, rods, and bars. They are made out of materials such as
ceramic (strontium ferrite), alnico (aluminum, nickel, and cobalt), rare earth
(samarium cobalt and neodymium) and flexible rubber-like material. Not only do
the shape and material of magnets vary, so do their applications. At many
companies, magnets are used for lifting, holding, separating, retrieving,
sensing and material handling. You can find magnets in a car — even around your
house! Magnets are used in the home to organize tools or kitchen utensils and
can be found in doorbells, loudspeakers, microwaves and televisions! Business
offices and schools use magnetic planning boards to display schedules and
charts.
Magnets
are also used in a compass to guide people if they are lost. In fact, the
compass was probably the first important magnetic device discovered. Around the
12th century, someone noticed that when allowed free movement, a magnet always
points in the same north/south direction. This discovery helped mariners who
often had trouble navigating when the clouds covered the sun or stars.
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