State Coulomb’s law for magnetic force.
Answers
Answered by
4
Coulomb's law for magnets is the analog in magnetism of Coulomb's law for electric charges. Coulomb's law describes the force between magnetic poles.
The conclusion that there were two types of magnetism, analogous to the two types of static electricity, was a natural consequence of the discovery that the poles of a magnet either attract or repel one another. The north (i.e. north-seeking) pole was said to be positive, whereas the south pole was negative.
Answered by
0
Coulomb's law for magnets is the analog in magnetism of Coulomb's law for electric charges. Coulomb's law describes the force between magnetic poles.
The conclusion that there were two types of magnetism, analogous to the two types of static electricity, was a natural consequence of the discovery that the poles of a magnet either attract or repel one another. The north (i.e. north-seeking) pole was said to be positive, whereas the south pole was negative.
The conclusion that there were two types of magnetism, analogous to the two types of static electricity, was a natural consequence of the discovery that the poles of a magnet either attract or repel one another. The north (i.e. north-seeking) pole was said to be positive, whereas the south pole was negative.
Similar questions
Hindi,
6 months ago
Math,
6 months ago
English,
6 months ago
Physics,
1 year ago
Social Sciences,
1 year ago