Calculating Magnetic Force Between Two Magnets

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Calculating the magnetic force between two magnets is complex due to the presence of multiple magnetic poles. While there is no straightforward equation for determining the force of attraction when magnets are in contact or at a distance, the dipole moment can be used for calculations at larger separations. Online calculators can provide estimates based on theoretical flux density, but these often do not align with experimental data. For practical applications, specific formulas involving contact surface area and magnetic induction are suggested, though they assume certain conditions. Understanding these nuances is essential for accurately measuring the pull strength of magnets in real-world scenarios.
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I've been searching for a simple answer online and on this site, but I haven't been able to find anything that explains this for me.

Simply, is there an equation that can be used to calculate the force of attraction between two magnets?
I am interested in when two magnets are touching, how much force will be required to separate them?
And when they are x distance apart, how much pull strength will they exhibit?

Thank you
Sean
 
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Hi and welcome to PF.
You haven't been able to find anything much about this because the 'strength' of real permanent magnets is hard to specify. The problem is that you are dealing with (even ideally) four magnetic poles, an N and a S on each one. At a large distance, they can be characterised by their Dipole Moment (whatever shape they are) and the force is easier to calculate but, when you are interested in the useful strength (for actually making use of them) it is much harder.
It is much easier to discus the Magnetic Force between two electromagnets - even easier to calculate the force between two parallel wires, carrying current.
Have you looked at the Wikipedia article? Does it have enough information for you?
Is your interest a general one or do you have a specific application and are you wondering what to buy?
 
I did take a look at that wikipedia article, but it is pretty advanced for me...
I do have a specific application that I am looking to use this for and, really, I need to figure out what I first mentioned, I figure there must be some way to calculate it...?
 
There is no simple way. It's possible to calculate the force that a relay coil applies to the contacts (eg to work out the return spring force required) but I bet relay manufacturers only use that as a starting point and do measurements to confirm.

http://info.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Workshop/advice/coils/force.html#nfringe

Perhaps see "Pull Force Case 3 Magnet to Magnet" on this calculator page...

https://www.kjmagnetics.com/calculator.asp

Note:

Most online calculators determine pull force based on a theoretical calculation of the flux density. With a few assumptions, flux density (in Gauss) can be related to the expected pull force. Unfortunately, this simplification often fails to match experimentally measured data. This page calculates expected pull forces based on extensive product testing.
 
Seaningtime said:
I've been searching for a simple answer online and on this site, but I haven't been able to find anything that explains this for me.

Simply, is there an equation that can be used to calculate the force of attraction between two magnets?
I am interested in when two magnets are touching, how much force will be required to separate them?
If the magnets are of same area A then:
gif.latex?F%3D\frac{B^{2}}{2\mu%20_{0}}\cdot%20A.gif
 
Thanks guys for all the responses!
zoki85- that looks like the formula that I'm looking for, what do the symbols represent?
 
A- contact surface area between two nearly touching magnets
B- magnetic induction in a very short gap between attracting magnets
μ0- permeability of free space

The formula assumes B is constant in the gap
 
thank you
 

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