No
The two sides of a magnet are called the north and south poles. Typically, the magnet is stronger at its poles rather than its sides. The strength of a magnet is usually concentrated at the poles, where the magnetic field lines are closer together and more forceful.
no as the broken will repeal as they form same poles
positive and negative
Yes, it is possible. Since a cube has 6 sides, so if you color each 2 parallel sides with a certain color, then 2 sides having the same color will never touch ;)
The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a Does_north_stick_to_north_for_magnets, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract.actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick It doesn't. A magnet's North will attract another magnet's South and vice versa
Two lines that run in the same direction that will never cross or touch. the equal sign is an example ====
Think of the two ples of a magnet like two sides of a coin. One cannot exist without the other.
no because parallel sides never touch.
north pole and south pole
place a magnet on a scale and measure the mass. then make the two magnets same sides in and put one above each other and read mass.
An isosceles triangle has two sides and two angles that are the same.