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Artificial Magnets. What is the difference between temporary magnets and permanent magnets?

Update:

How do you make permanent magnets?

Update 2:

Michelle

Why is it that a bar of soft iron is attracted by a magnet but not by an other bar of soft iron.

Second part of the exeperiment.

Connect the first bar of soft iron to a magnet and the first bar atracts the second.

Why?

7 Answers

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  • semdot
    Lv 4
    1 decade ago
    Favourite answer

    In your experiment, the soft iron becomes a temporary magnet only while it is in contact with the permanent magnet. When the permanent magnet is removed, the soft iron loses its magnetization.

    Think of it like stretching a spring then letting it collapse back to zero. If you stretch the spring far enough though, you can permanently deform it.

    The soft iron can become permanently magnetized by a number of methods.

    1. Apply a HUGE magnetic field to the iron. If the force was large enough, it permanently magnetizes the iron. This is the method usually used to manufacture magnets.

    2. Apply a smaller magnetic field the iron and at the same time, whack it a good one with a hammer. This shakes up the iron and it to magnetize a little,

    3. Apply a magnetic field and at the same time heat the iron to its Currie temperature (very hot, but not melting) and allow it to cool again. The iron becomes magnetized to the almost exact amount of the magnetizing field.

  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    A permanent magnet is one that has a magnetic attraction without any outside stimulation, while an electromagnet has a coil winding around it. When electricity passes through the coil, it causes a magnet field around the iron/steel piece. The electric field is relatively small whereas the electromagnetic field can be quite large. Depends on the size of the metal and the amount of electricity going through the coils. An increase in the magnetic field generated as stated above.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    It's been awhile since Pimpin John was in a science class, [so take this FWIW] but I don't think any magnet is really permanent unless it's an electromagnet. Aside from that it's just a matter of the magnets composition which should determine relative strength.

  • cld
    Lv 6
    1 decade ago

    Temporary magnets(such as electromagnets) become magnetic because of a factor(such as an electric magnetic field) that causes the magnetic domains to align into one direction. When the factor is not applied, the magnet's domains return to their normal random state, and therefore loses its magnetism.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    i dont know how this works but it does. take a screw driver (a non magnetized one) and rub a magnet from one end to the other. you now have a magnetic screw driver. now rub the magnet in the opposite direction. you now have a non magnetic screw driver.

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    temp is only a magnet when an emf or voltage is applied the others is a magnet always

  • 1 decade ago

    The only 'temporary' magnets I know of are electromagnets.

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