It is also grade school science to show that neither an electromagnet nor a permanent magnet will pick up nonferrous items like copper or aluminum. While technically not an electromagnet ...
As detailed by Interesting Engineering, a team at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) developed the first ...
Have you ever wondered how switchable magnets work? Not electromagnets, but those permanent magnet fixtures like the ones that hold dial indicators to machine tools, or the big, powerful chucks ...
unlike the clumsiest electromagnet, which can be controlled by the flick of a switch. Permanent magnets seemed permanently limited until Westinghouse Engineer Ray Radus taught them a new trick.
An iron core makes a temporary electromagnet. It loses its magnetism as soon as the switch is opened and the current is switched off. A steel core makes a more permanent magnet. It does not lose ...