That depends on the strength of the magnet and thickness of the glass.
A regular magnet may work through a thin piece of glass, however a weak magnet will not work through a thick piece of glass.
Yes they will, however the thicker the glass the stronger the magnet will need to be.
yes.
No, magnets don't stick to glass. At least not magnetically. Glass is basically an oxide of silicon. Magnets stick to ferromagnetic metals.
No Magnets usually work through metal magnets often work through iron
No it would stick
Yes it will.
Yes.
magnets cant find glass unless the glass has iron essence in it or has been rubbed up against magnetic metal a lot.
Yes.
No.
because its made of glass
yes sound can break glass
magnets cant find glass unless the glass has iron essence in it or has been rubbed up against magnetic metal a lot.
No! there's no magnet attraction between glass and metal, I don't think the glass wont do anything.
depends on how thick the glass is but yes they can
suspend the magnets from strings in such a way that they only repel each other. (Between two glass plates maybe, so they can't rotate.) measure the angle of the strings. Knowing the weight of each magnet, the acceleration of gravity, and the cosine of the angle between the strings this should give you enough to calculate the magnitude of the force between the magnets. (Providing you know vector addition of course.)
Hi there magnets work this way North to North Repels South to South Repels but South To north attracts. If you have unmarked magnets or they just repel your magnet may be dogy stroke it with another magnet one way this will make it a stronger magnet and correct it if ome f the fibres are running in different directions.
One form of magnetic glass is a painted glass that is laminated to steel. This gives the glass a magnetic white board effect. Because any magnet used must be strong enough to reach the steel through the glass this generally only works with strong magnets like rare earth magnets. A great resource for magnetic glass writeboards is HighTower Group: http://www.hightoweraccess.com/pricelist/chatboard.html
no, glass isn't magnetic
Magnetic field are unaffected by those materials. Magnets and electrical fields in general are only effected by other magnetic fields. Think of a compass that is brought near another magnet. Magnetic fields are exponential in strength meaning that they are most strong at the surface and quickly fade with distance. Dont have the equation but its simple and straight forward. So if you want a magnetic field to extend through a thick (5mmm) cardboard or plastic you will need larger more powerful magnets such as rare earth or neodymium magnets. Its really about the strength of the magnet and the distance of the magnetic field. Hope that helps.
Yes. Neither the glass nor the water shields the paperclipfrom the field of the magnet.
with a magnet! powered iron will stick to the magnet laving the glass behind
you put the magnet by the paperclip and it goes up
It depends on how thick the glass is and how strong the magnets are.