<p>Does anyone remember that question about throwing a ball on the moon? I knew that the mass didn't change, but I wasn't sure which of the other three (I think 2.5 times as high, 6 times as high, and 36 times as high).</p>
<p>Edit: My favorite part was the graphs. My least favorite part was the magnet questions... I don't think I even answered any of them.</p>
<p>"the one about a metal bar being attracted to the north pole of a magnet is that its made of an insulator right?"</p>
<p>Edit: Actually, I think I put that it had the property of being magnetized. All I could think was back in kindergarten when we picked up pins with a magnet... I'm not sure if it's the same principle here though.</p>
<p>To prepare, I took the test in 22 Real SAT II's or whatever it's called, and I did some problems in my Princeton Review book for AP Physics. I did well on the AP Physics exam but I only took the Mechanics half because we only did electromagnetism at the very end of my (non-AP) Physics class. Now I wish that I had bought a real SAT II Physics book, though...</p>
<p>If it just has the property of being magnetized, shouldn't the bar be attracted to the south pole of the magnet as well? What I thought was, the only way that it is ONLY attracted to the north pole of that magnet if both poles of that metal are south poles.</p>