no. They only attract to Nickel, Cobalt, Iron, and certain alloys.
yes.......! i guess its yes because aluminum is a metal and all the metals are attracted by magnets so hence aluminum get attracted to metals...!
yes even though magnets repel water
No its like steel metal
Several different metals can be used in magnets. Iron is perhaps the most common metal used in permanent magnets, but alloys such as Alnico (Aluminum, Nickel, and Cobalt) can also make very strong permanent magnets.
Some magnets are metal. Not all magnets are metal (though I can't offhand think of any magnets that don't at least contain metal), and not all metals are magnets.
They do because it has all diffrent metal in that reacts with magnets a lot of things like computers, tv's ect have metal in.
Magnets?
no. They only attract to Nickel, Cobalt, Iron, and certain alloys.
There are magnets in magnets that magnetically attract metal...
magnetic? metal sticky?
Because silly, paper is not a metal. Magnets only attract to metal objects, not wood, or sand, or a finger, but only metal.
All metals don't stick to magnets because they are alike and if they are alike they repel each others. ^sucks^ The three pure metals that don't stick to magnets are copper, silver, and gold.
They magnetic and magnets are attracted to metal objects. since the refrigerator has metal in it the magnet sticks to it.
No, magnets cannot repel metal. To repel something with a magnet it would have to have a magnetic field.
if different magnets attract metals then the attraction will be different.
Magnets are most commonly made out of metal, so yes, two metal magnets can repel. But metals such as iron are attracted to magnets even if the metal itself is not magnetized. Iron is attracted to both poles of a magnet, and it can not be repelled by a magnet.