Asked by marisol
student moves a horseshoe magnet by hand across a tabletop to varying distances from an electromagnet, as shown in the diagram below.
image
The student records observations of how much force it takes to hold the horseshoe magnet in place at each distance.
Observations
20 cm: no force required
10 cm: small force required; easy to hold in place
5 cm: large force required; very difficult to hold in place
What do the student's observations demonstrate?
A.
The electromagnet's magnetic field is stronger close to it than far from it.
B.
The electromagnet's magnetic field becomes stronger as a small amount of strength is added to the system by the battery.
C.
The electromagnet's magnetic field is stronger as more turns are added to the wire on the nail.
D.
The electromagnet's magnetic field becomes stronger as more magnetic material is added to it.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
A.
The observations show that the magnetic force (and thus the electromagnet's field strength) increases as distance to the electromagnet decreases — strongest close (5 cm), weakest far away (20 cm).
The observations show that the magnetic force (and thus the electromagnet's field strength) increases as distance to the electromagnet decreases — strongest close (5 cm), weakest far away (20 cm).
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