English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Second pole must be directed to its core and poles must be close… Two strong mechanical arms will be needed to conect magnets cos the same poles will repel each other and invertial will attract… The spehere must keep proper balance of weight and its magentic pole forced by mechanical conection of magnets… It must be heavy but the strength of magnetic field must be also appropriate…Its second hint of anty-gravity secret I am giving away… and I want to know if you understand and are able to make it… It’s a part of complicated mechanism… Sorry… no chance to make it more simple by me weak head... This secret needs more than power of one man...

2007-06-09 06:28:23 · 4 answers · asked by Robert M Mrok (Gloom) 4 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

Joseph S, Doug… are you saying that making construction from magents like from briks by conecting them by force and chaing them by some steel net… is not possible?… Somehow… I can force two magnets to stand to each other by force of my hands… in any possition… Maybe its language diffrence again… Ugg… If I wrote something not clearly again… Uh… Some things must be discused not to leave misunderstandings…

2007-06-09 07:01:52 · update #1

Construction from ready magnets***

2007-06-09 07:51:18 · update #2

Well... sphere was supposed to imitate proton... I guess I would know all of that if I made prototype... Anyway we need weight that will travel in magnetic tunel...

2007-06-10 00:45:52 · update #3

4 answers

very interesting concept. it got me researching. found this article that is one person's answer.
http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/2001-06/993559792.Ph.r.html

2007-06-09 08:06:24 · answer #1 · answered by Piglet O 6 · 0 0

Let me tell u how such a magnet will be made. There are three methods:- (1)You get such a magnet as such from mines as magnetite(Fe3O4). This magnet will be already having its poles which it acquired during its formation, if it is having its dipoles arranged in a random order, then it'll simply be not a magnet. (2)You'll get a bar magnet and melt it and cast it ina sphere. But doing this will destroy its magnetic properties as heat destroys magnet. (3)First u will take a small bar magnet having its poles, then u'll add other tiny bits of magnet until it becomes spherical of nsize that u want. When u're doing this then u'll be able to join only those poles of bits which have polarity opposite to that of the small barmagnet u took initially. The similar poles will not be joined. So, what i mean to say is that u'll be having several tiny magnets joined to each other in series and finally a large spherical magnet will be having same polarity that of a small bar magnet u used initially. I think u'll be clear that there is no need to worry about its poles, poles will be there and will be in a definite direction only!

2016-05-20 23:37:27 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

due to the process by which magnets are.... magnetized, i do not believe it is possible to have a magnet with poles in any other arrangement aside from north-bottom south-top (or vice-versa)

2007-06-09 06:33:04 · answer #3 · answered by Fundamenta- list Militant Atheist 5 · 0 0

'Magnetic monopoles' would violate Maxwells Equations (which have been shown both theoretically and experimentally to be correct)

Doug

2007-06-09 06:51:53 · answer #4 · answered by doug_donaghue 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers