Hi all
I have this cool magnetic toy which I accidentally dropped a paper clip on the other day and discovered something cool:
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The set up: There are two red bar magnets attached horizontally, a collection of loose nuts making the person, and a paper clip. No glue, etc. The paper clip hangs there roughly parallel with the ground.
The paper clip seems to be in an equilibrium point because if I push or lift it, it bounces back to the same horizontal position in the picture. It works either side of the head or attached to the arms.
If I rearrange it so it is higher, the paper clip hangs lower and vice versa, so it is obviously related to the proximity to the red magnets, but if I push the paper clip too close to the red magnet it snaps to it. The easy answer seems to be that the paperclip and red magnet are the same polarity and repelling each other until the upwards force equals gravity, but I can't quite reconcile that with the magnets themselves - why doesn't the magnet repel the nuts then?
I am assuming the answer is fairly obvious to anyone with a smattering of physics so any help understanding it would be appreciated. Regardless of explanation it is pretty cool and understanding it will make it even cooler
Cheers
I have this cool magnetic toy which I accidentally dropped a paper clip on the other day and discovered something cool:
__
The set up: There are two red bar magnets attached horizontally, a collection of loose nuts making the person, and a paper clip. No glue, etc. The paper clip hangs there roughly parallel with the ground.
The paper clip seems to be in an equilibrium point because if I push or lift it, it bounces back to the same horizontal position in the picture. It works either side of the head or attached to the arms.
If I rearrange it so it is higher, the paper clip hangs lower and vice versa, so it is obviously related to the proximity to the red magnets, but if I push the paper clip too close to the red magnet it snaps to it. The easy answer seems to be that the paperclip and red magnet are the same polarity and repelling each other until the upwards force equals gravity, but I can't quite reconcile that with the magnets themselves - why doesn't the magnet repel the nuts then?
I am assuming the answer is fairly obvious to anyone with a smattering of physics so any help understanding it would be appreciated. Regardless of explanation it is pretty cool and understanding it will make it even cooler
Cheers