Part 5/10:
One observation is that most magnets tend to fall more centered through the copper tubes when their north pole faces upward. This behavior may implicate the Earth's magnetic influence, potentially involving the Coriolis effect, prompting suggestions for international replication—particularly in the southern hemisphere—to test if the orientation reverses in different geographic locations.
Multiple Magnet Arrangements
Further experiments involved combining multiple smaller magnets—precisely four 0.625-inch diameter by 0.125-inch thick neodymium magnets. When glued with opposite poles, these create a combined magnetic field that, as visualized through the viewing paper, appears as two distinct division lines, suggesting that the magnets act collectively as single magnetic entities.