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Posted

Let's say I have two pairs of identical magnets. The first pair is 1 Tesla. The second pair is 2 Tesla. If I have unlike poles facing each other as below, would the total force on the balance be the same?

 

1T2T

 

1T2T

Balance

 

0r

 

1T2T

 

2T1T

Balance

Posted

Sorry. It's like poles facing each other. The bottom pair is placed on a weighing machine. The upper pair is held up by a retort stand etc. Let's all have north poles face each other.

 

First Kes.

1 Tesla faces 1 Tesla

2 Tesla faces 2 Tesla.

 

Second kes.

1 Tesla faces 2 Tesla

2 Tesla faces 1 Tesla.

 

Would the weighing machine register the same force?

Posted

No. The force would be greater in the first case.

When a strong magnet faces a weaker magnet, N to N, the stronger magnet tends to demagnetize the weaker magnet. A strong N opposite a weak enough N can even attract.

Posted

What about the diagonal repulsion. Is that taken into account? What if I rotate a smaller like pole over a much larger like pole. Would the weighing machine register a constant or a variable force, assuming the weighing machine is accurate to 0.0001g?

Posted
How would you calculate the force of repulsion between the two magnets?

 

LF

Most texts don't do this.

In order to push two bar magnets together would take a force

F=2\pi MM'A, where M and M' are the magnet strengths in gauss, A the area in cm^2, and F is in dynes.

Actually, the force would be somewhat less than this due to the demagnetization, which depends on the actual material of the magnets.

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