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Forums
Physics
Classical Physics
Electromagnetism
Only one pole in a horseshoe magnet
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[QUOTE="mfb, post: 5962010, member: 405866"] You create the equivalent of two permanent magnets with equal poles held together: The fields will largely cancel each other and you get a complex and weak sum of the two fields. You cannot create magnetic monopoles that way. While these might exist as elementary particles, no magnetic monopole has ever been found - if they exist at all, they must be incredibly rare. [/QUOTE]
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Forums
Physics
Classical Physics
Electromagnetism
Only one pole in a horseshoe magnet
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