Physics, asked by redent1583, 1 year ago

Do two distinct poles actually exist at two nearby points in a magnetic dipole?

Answers

Answered by rejibala21
1

Answer:

No, two distinct poles cannot exist at two nearby points in a magnet, as a magnet contains only two distinct poles located at its ends.

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Answered by bhuvna789456
0

Explanation:

No, there can not be two distinct poles in a magnet at two neighboring points, since a magnet only comprises two distinct poles at its ends.

Magnetic dipole:- The boundary of Either through a closed loop is a magnetic dipole of A pair of poles or electricity  current,  as the source size is Lowered to 0 while retaining a constant Miraculous moment. It's the electric dipole's magnetic equivalent but the comparison isn't great.

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