No.just Iron,Nickel,Cobalt attract to a magnet
No.
For more information see the answer to the Related Question shown below,
No.just Iron,Nickel,Cobalt attract to a magnet
no most magnets are made of iron, lead is diamagnetic (nonmagnetic)
No, lead cannot be magnetized, only iron nickel and cobalt are magnetic. A metal alloy must contain at least some iron, nickel or cobalt to be magnetized.
Never. only magnect stick Group V matels. eg: Fe, Gb
Lead is a not magnetic element.
NO
Permanent magnets contain magnetic atoms (almost always iron) whose magnetic poles are all (or mostly) aligned in the same direction.
Cobalt, Nickel, and lead
Generally, non-ferrous one (those that do not contain iron) Cobalt and nickel are slightly attracted by magnets.
Theoretically, an airplane does not need to have any magnets in it, but most airplanes do contain magnets. Every electrical motor contains magnets, and small electric motors are used in various parts of an airplane, such as for raising and lowering the landing gear.
Essentially they all have some form of iron or iron alloy.
Lead is used in magnets.
Lead
The speakers in a stereo contain powerful magnets.
Permanent magnets contain a current-carrying wire.
Some minerals contain magnetite, which is atracted to magnets.
Lead
no
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.
magnets
All electric motors contain magnets- and information storage in computers is based on magnets. Electrical generators contain magnets, as do electrical transformers. Even the charger for your IPod is based on electromagnets.
Neither lead nor silver is ferromagnetic. It's possible that some magnets may contain small amounts of lead and/or silver as contaminants, but as far as I know there are no common magnetic alloys that involve either of them in significant quantities.
magnets