Umm, no.
If you hold the fridge door so it's horizontal with the magnet hanging underneath it still stays stuck to the door. Please explain how friction is responsible for that.
Umm, no.
If you hold the fridge door so it's horizontal with the magnet hanging underneath it still stays stuck to the door. Please explain how friction is responsible for that.
It seems that we don't know. We know that magnets exert a field that reacts with other magnets and iron and steel but we don't know what that field is exactly. We can harness it to create electricity and do many important and benificial things. We can also measure the field, in fact we can measure it very precisely. We have some theories but beyond that I don't think we know. I've never met anyone who claimed to know. Some people want to play cute games like zep but those are not really helpful beyond making one feel stupid. Hell, who hasn't played games with magnets as children and understand intuitively how they work so that is not at all helpful. It makes him feel superior I supose so that's worth something.
Somethings we just don't know. Unless, I'm wrong and someone wants to let you and I in on the secret. I wouldn't hold my breath.
It seems that we don't know. We know that magnets exert a field that reacts with other magnets and iron and steel but we don't know what that field is exactly. We can harness it to create electricity and do many important and benificial things. We can also measure the field, in fact we can measure it very precisely. We have some theories but beyond that I don't think we know. I've never met anyone who claimed to know. Some people want to play cute games like zep but those are not really helpful beyond making one feel stupid. Hell, who hasn't played games with magnets as children and understand intuitively how they work so that is not at all helpful. It makes him feel superior I supose so that's worth something.
Somethings we just don't know. Unless, I'm wrong and someone wants to let you and I in on the secret. I wouldn't hold my breath.
Sorry, but UserGoogle is correct.
In the usual scenario, magnetism explains why the magnet remains next to the fridge door. Friction is necessary to explain why it remains next to whatever spot you happen to place it on. In your alternate scenario magnetism explains why the magnet stays on the door. Friction explains why you'll feel resistance if you try to push the magnet along the bottom of the door.
In both cases you need to know about both magnetism and friction to understand the full phenomena that you're looking at.
Cheers,
Ben
Ah crap. You are indeed both correct.In that case it's magnetism doing all the work, but that's a completely different system from what the original poster asked. Topspy asked, although in a somewhat confused way, how magnets stick to refridgerator doors. I answered that question. You are referring to a very different question.
When a magnet is placed sufficiently close to a refrigerator door, the magnetic force pulls the magnet towards the door. (For reasons that have already been explained.) When the door is perpendicular to the ground, however, the force of gravity and the force of magnetism are pointing in completely different directions, with gravity pulling the magnet down and electromagnetism pulling it sideways. Thus, it cannot be the magnetism which is countering the force of gravity, but rather friction, in the way I said. When the door is parallell to the ground and the magnet is below it, then yes, it is magnetism doing all the work. And if the door is paralell to the ground and the magnet is above the door, (such as if you knocked the fridge on its back) then magnetism and gravity are pulling in the same direction, and it is the "contact force" of the door which is holding the magnet up. That is, the force that resists objects from passing through each other as if they were ghosts.
(Ultimately, contact forces and friction are just special kinds of electromagnetism, with the electrons on the outside of the outside of the objects interacting with each other, although that's getting a bit off the original topic.)
of the 4 main forces in the universe:
strong forces
weak forces
gravity
and magnetism
magnetism is said to be actually stronger than gravity.
... However, with the example of the fridge magnet parallel to the ground, the electromagnetic force is opposed by gravity, if only by the tiniest amount. On the surface of a neutron star, the star's gravity would whip it off the fridge as is nothing was holding it up.
It would probably strip the enamel paint off the door as well.
current theory holds that there are only 4 kinds of forces in the universe, in decreasing order of strength:
Looking at a radioactive atom like uranium, you'll see that the nuclear forces are only barely overpowering the electromagnetic forces. The hold is so tenuous that a stray bump from a neutron is enough to shatter the nucleus, allowing the stored electromagnetic energy to launch pieces of the nucleus apart at great speed.
Hmm, I don't think I agree with that. Why do we get energy from fusing hydrogen nuclei into helium nuclei, then?
Dr. Trintignant said:The nuclear force falls off faster than the electromagnetic, and therefore a bigger nucleus is not held together so strongly as a small one. That's just a guess (and I realize there are many complicating factors) but I think the basic gist of it is true.
Seeing as nobody who has posted knows the answer (and I don't either)...
http://www.coolmagnetman.com/maghow.htm