How do magnets work?

Caitlin Olson
2 min readJul 14, 2023

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Photo by Dan Cristian Pădureț on Unsplash

📓 The short answer

A magnet is an object wherein most or all of its electrons move in the same direction, creating a magnetic field with north and south ends.

📚 The long answer

Let’s zoom in all the way to the atomic level. Atoms are the smallest unit of matter, and electrons spin around the nucleus of the atom. The spinning of electrons forms a tiny magnetic field. In most materials, the atoms have electrons that spin in different directions from each other, so their collective magnetic force is canceled out.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (Dec 2021).

But when the electrons of atoms spin in the same direction, a powerful magnetic force is created. Magnetic materials have a flow of magnetic force going out of the north end and entering in south end. This creates what is known as a magnetic field.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (Dec 2021).

When two objects with strong magnetic fields get close to one other, the response will either be attraction or repulsion. If you place a north and a south end of different magnetic objects near each other, they will attract. But north-to-north and south-to-south will cause repulsion.

Not all materials have a strong magnetic field, of course. So when you place a magnetically strong object (e.g. iron) beside a magnetically weaker object (e.g. cloth), there will be no effect.

Now, go forth and admire your refrigerator magnets for their amazing power that they possess!

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Caitlin Olson
Caitlin Olson

Written by Caitlin Olson

🤓 Amateur nerd. I write about questions that pop into my head about how the world works. Subscribe to my free weekly newsletter ---> todayyoushouldknow.com

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