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Magnet

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Contents

Key Stage 1

Meaning

 
A horseshoe magnet

A magnet is an object that sticks to some metals.

About Magnets

Magnets are very useful. We can use them to stick notes to the fridge.

Key Stage 2

Meaning

A magnet is a piece of equipment that can be used to do determine if a material is magnetic.

Singular Noun: Magnet
Plural Noun: Magnets
Adjective: Magnetic

About Magnets

Magnets are attracted to some metals. Those metals are magnetic but they are not magnets themselves.
Magnets have two poles; North and South.
When two North Poles are placed next to each other two magnets will repel each other.
When two South Poles are placed next to each other two magnets will repel each other.
When the North Pole of one magnet is placed next to the South Pole of another magnet they attract each other.

Examples

Magnets are attracted to some metals. Those metals are magnetic but they are not magnets themselves. Magnets have two poles; North and South.
Two magnets facing North-North will repel each other and two magnets facing South-South will repel each other. Two magnets facing North-South will attract each other.

Key Stage 3

Meaning

A magnet is an object that attracts Iron, Cobalt or Nickel.

About Magnets

There are three types of magnet you should know:
Magnets are attracted to some metals (Cobalt, Nickel and Iron). Those metals are magnetic but they are not magnets themselves.
Magnets have two poles; North and South.
When two North Poles are placed next to each other two magnets will repel each other.
When two South Poles are placed next to each other two magnets will repel each other.
When the North Pole of one magnet is placed next to the South Pole of another magnet they attract each other.
All magnets have a magnetic field around them which influences other magnetic materials.

Examples

The bar magnet is a permanent magnet. This is a diagram of an electromagnet.

Key Stage 4

Meaning

A magnet is an object that produces its own magnetic field.

About Magnets

There are three types of magnet you should know:
Magnets are attracted to some metals (Cobalt, Nickel and Iron). Those metals are magnetic but they are not magnets themselves.
Magnets have two poles; North and South.
When two North Poles are placed next to each other two magnets will repel each other.
When two South Poles are placed next to each other two magnets will repel each other.
When the North Pole of one magnet is placed next to the South Pole of another magnet they attract each other.
The Earth is a magnet as evidenced by a magnetic compass lining up North to South everywhere on Earth.
All magnets have a magnetic field around them which influences other magnetic materials.
A magnet is made of several small magnetic domains which are regions in the magnet which act as smaller magnets.
When magnetic domains are aligned the object has an external magnetic field so it acts like a magnet. When the magnetic domains are not aligned there is no external magnetic field because the effect of the magnetic domains cancels out.

Examples

The bar magnet is a permanent magnet. This is a diagram of an electromagnet.

References

AQA

Magnet; bar, page 244, GCSE Physics; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Magnet; cylindrical, page 256, GCSE Physics; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Magnet; electromagnet, pages 242-3, 248, 250-1, GCSE Physics; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Magnet; permanent, pages 242, 245, GCSE Physics; Student Book, Collins, AQA

Edexcel

Magnets, page 267, GCSE Physics, CGP, Edexcel
Magnets, pages 168-169, GCSE Physics, Pearson Edexcel
Magnets, pages 195, 196, 198, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
Magnets, pages 402-403, GCSE Combined Science, Pearson Edexcel
Magnets, pages 85, 86, 88, GCSE Physics; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
Magnets; electromagnets, pages 270-272, GCSE Physics, CGP, Edexcel
Magnets; induced magnets, pages 267, 268, GCSE Physics, CGP, Edexcel
Magnets; uses, pages 271, 272, GCSE Physics, CGP, Edexcel