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the magnet gets weaker
no salt is non magnetic
if it truly is a magnet, than no. however, you can demagnetize a magnet by dropping it or hitting it really hard to rearrange the domains within the magnet. Domains are the regions within a magnet that have particles that are either arranged so that the poles are attracted to each other or randomly arranged so that the particles are not magnetized at all. so if it is a magnet... it probably will be magnetic unless you take your anger out on it or something.
An magnet is a material or object that creates a magnetic field. Bar magnets constantly create their magnetic field, while electromagnets are coils that only produce a magnetic field when an electric current passes through it.
A magnet cannot use words to create an electric current. A moving magnet will induce electric current in adjacent conductors. This is usually described in terms of the rate that magnetic flux lines connecting the opposite poles of the magnet "cut" the conductors. The more flux lines cutting the conductors per second, the more current induced.
Heating the magnet to very high temperatures, hitting it very hard e.g. with a hammer, and exposing it to a strong, random magnetic field would work. Do not try these at home!! Magnets contain aligned, spinning molecules to create a strong magnetic field. The above methods break the alignment of the molecules, destroying the magnet.
Heating the magnet to very high temperatures, hitting it very hard e.g. with a hammer, and exposing it to a strong, random magnetic field would work. Do not try these at home!! Magnets contain aligned, spinning molecules to create a strong magnetic field. The above methods break the alignment of the molecules, destroying the magnet.
by placing it in a strong magnetic field and hitting it with a hammer(please don't do this on working magnets as their strength will be decreased)
By striking the side of the end of a steel rod with a hammer you will make a weak magnet.
the magnet gets weaker
Permanent magnets are magnetic because of things called "domains." Domains are like mini-magnets in the large magnet - when they all line up perfectly, you get a noticeable magnetic field. When they don't, the domains cancel each other out, and hence, do not create a magnet. To demagnetize a permanent magnet, the domains must come out of alignment - this is most easily accomplished by imparting a large force to the magnet (hitting it with a hammer) Alternatively, electromagnets are created via moving charges in a coil of wire (electric current). These magnets are designed to be turned on and off, so demagnetizing an electromagnet is as simple as switching off the current.
It's possible. Striking a permanent magnet can jumble the orientation of the magnetic domains, resulting in a loss of strength.
To demagetize a magnet you could smash one if the ends with a hammer. this will cause the order of atoms to rearange so that it's not magnetic.
A magnet is an alignment of particles in a solid. You can imagine a magnet as a bunch of tiny magnets that are all pointing in the same direction. When they point in the same direction, the little parts add up, and the magnet works like you'd expect. When you heat or hammer a magnet, the little magnetic parts can get jostled and unaligned. When that alignment is disturbed, they no longer point in the same direction and may even cancel other magnetic parts out, weakening and eventualy destroying the magnetism.
putting a magnet to it, using it too much and hitting it with a hammer
Magnetic waves are used to move the iron but the iron does not give off magnetic waves until it is touching the magnet
a very strong magnet.