Farsight
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Good point.
Edit: I wish I'd thought of that.
Edit: I wish I'd thought of that.
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Irresistible_Force said:Ok, from the big bang, to the Stars, as radiation to the plants, eaten by animals that I just had for supper...no really.
So really, where does it come from?
umm... "defying gravity" to you evidently just means not falling down. It doesn't take any energy not to fall down.Visaliasteve said:This is a question I find fascinating and have no answer. I have read the answers but I believe there is more to a magnet than meets the eye. I believe there is another force at work that we have not discovered. I am not referring to magnetism itself as I belief a magnet may simply act as a lens for another energy source that we know little about such as gravity. Notice the mathematical formulas for gravity and magnetism are similar. Some of the answers refer to work and state that a magnet does not perform work therefore does not expend or require energy; I say it does work when it is stuck to another object as it defies gravity without any external energy source. In fact magnets can support holding weights many times their own mass. I have no answer for this but who ever unlocks this mystery will be worth a fortune.
Visaliasteve said:This is a question I find fascinating and have no answer. I have read the answers but I believe there is more to a magnet than meets the eye. I believe there is another force at work that we have not discovered. I am not referring to magnetism itself as I belief a magnet may simply act as a lens for another energy source that we know little about such as gravity.
Some of the answers refer to work and state that a magnet does not perform work therefore does not expend or require energy; I say it does work when it is stuck to another object as it defies gravity without any external energy source.
What formulas?Visaliasteve said:Notice the mathematical formulas for gravity and magnetism are similar.
There is no stored energy in a permanent magnet. Poorer quality magnetic materials become demagnetized with use because the magnetic domains don't hold the magnetized positions under stress as well as the newer magnetic materials do. Given the same initial magnetization, old fashioned hardened steel will lose it's magnetism relatively quickly with use, but the average ferro-ceramic magnet, as in an audio speaker, a newer, better material, will stay magnetized indefinitely despite constant use. In the case of the former no energy is being expended by the magnet with each use, rather, the orientation of the magnetic fields of its "domains" are all going out of alignment. In the latter, better, material the orientation is not subject to slippage like this.junglebeast said:Actually permanent magnets can do work and then do have stored energy.