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Water molecules attract the opposite poles of other polar molecules through poles present in water itself.
Other molecules
Unlike charges attract. Unlike molecules do not, otherwise everything ever would be attracted to everything else ever.If two molecules are of different charges, then yes, they will attract.
The number of molecules has nothing to do with attraction or repulsion.
A water molecule is polar, which is why it attracts other polar molecules.
Anything that dissolves in water, such as sugar or salt, does so because it has an attraction on the molecular level; sugar molecules attract water molecules. This attraction helps to overcome the attraction that water molecules have for each other, which holds them together in a frozen form.
By polarity, the opposite charges attract each other.
Other molecules
Water molecules attract the opposite poles of other polar molecules through poles present in water itself.
Other molecules
Unlike charges attract. Unlike molecules do not, otherwise everything ever would be attracted to everything else ever.If two molecules are of different charges, then yes, they will attract.
Matter attracts each other same as the phenomenon of magnet's unlike and like poles attract and repel each other.
Yes, that is how they attract to each other to create molecules.
cohesion
the south side of one magnet attract to the north side of the other magnet; opposites attract. The molecules get attracted.
The strong nuclear, or "color," force. (Technically, the color force holds the protons and neutrons themselves together; the force that holds the nucleons to other nucleons is the residual color force.)
When carbon dioxide is a gas, the molecules repel each other. When carbon dioxide is a solid the molecules do attract each other, and bond in a crystalline structure.