All standard 1943 cents were made of steel to save copper for the war effort, so they ALL stick to magnets. In average condition they're only worth 15 to 35 cents.
They are worth about 5 cents or so to a collector if in average circulated condition and worth about 10 cents if in pristine condition.
yes ,I have tried it too
no, only metal or magnetic objects.
the magnet it could stick together becaus esomehow the metal attracts the magnet and it makes pulls the metal material and stick to it
depends on the metal, iron.
It would stick to the magnet....
no, the type of metal used is platinum which is unfavorable to metal or magnet.
Gold, of any carat weight will not stick to a magnet. Only ferrous metals will stick to a magnet. Gold, aluminum, brass and copper are a few types of non-ferrous metals,and will not stick to a magnet. If your gold sticks to a magnet it is gold plated ferrous metal.
The refrigerator isn't actually a magnet, it it simply made of metal which magnets can then stick to.
when a magnet does'nt stick to another magnet it is called non-metal
A magnetic material is able to stick to anything.
The only jewelry that would stick to a magnet would be anything with iron in it. Gold, silver, and platinum will not stick to magnets, either.
Amagnate can stick to certain plates, If there is a plate in your body that magnates can stick to then it has to determine where in the body the plate is. If its near the skin then probably yes, but if its deeper in your body the magnate may not stick
Sterling silver is a non-ferrous metal alloy, so a magnet will not stick to it. Many metals, however, are non-ferrous, so just because a magnet doesn't stick to a particular metal doesn't make it sterling silver.