If you charge up a neutral rod of plastic by rubbing it in material and hold it next to low powered water the water will get attracted to the rod.
No. Ions are actually attracted to water because it its polarity.
Polar Molecules
A substance that attracts water molecules is hydrophillic, hydro meaning water and phillic meaning attracted to. The opposite would be hydrophobic, hydro meaning water and phobic meaning scared of.
Because water molecules are polar covalent, one side is slightly negative and the other slightly positive. Thus, they are attracted to one another.
Magnets is made of iron. Magnets are attracted to anything made out of iron.
Because of gravity, anything with mass is attracted to everything else with mass.
put it in the water and it can be attracted to anything
Lightning is attracted to water and if you're surfing it'll be attracted to you
water will attracted because water is charged
When water is attracted to water it is called cohesion. When water is attracted to other materials, it is called adhesion. This occurs because water is polar.
Gold is quite inert, and not attracted to anything. Many people, however, are very attracted to gold.
No flies generally aren't attracted to light but they are attracted to sugar water. More sugar than water.
English men are attracted to anything with a heartbeat.
beer is sweet and hornets are attracted to anything sweet
Anything that is attracted to a permanent magnet will be attracted to (sticks to) a temporary magnet.
Ion-dipole attraction dictates that the negative pole of a water molecule will be attracted to the sodium cation and the positive pole of a water molecule will be attracted to the chloride anion.
Anything with iron in it.