an oven
yes it does affect magnets ! though cold has little effect on the properties of a magnet , but heat drastically brings about change in properties of a magnet. With increasing temperature, the magnet will gradually lose magnetization until a certain temperature (called the Curie temperature) where the magnetization goes away entirely. In addition to this effect, the domains of the magnet will have a greater chance of changing orientation, further weakening the overall magnetic effect.
Yes, it does due to the magnetic force coming from the magnet. After a period of time the magnet that is in lower temperature increases while higher temperatures decrease.
higher the temperature, lower is the magnetic strength..
Yes, the temperature of a magnet does effect its strength. Both freezing, and hot temperatures take away from a magnets magnetic force. Room temperature ( about 50-80) is the temperature that magnets are the Best
If the temperature gets higher than a limit (I think it is called Curie temperature) then the fundamental pagentic dipoles loose their orientation and the magnet looses its magnetic field.
NO!!! the strength of magnet is not affected by temperature
If you drop a magnet, you can potentially make it lose some of its magnetism. Striking it with a hammer, exposing it to electric charges, and extreme temperature changes (rapid temperature change from freezing to boiling for example) can affect its magnetism.
No the temperature doesn't the size does.
yes it does affect magnets ! though cold has little effect on the properties of a magnet , but heat drastically brings about change in properties of a magnet. With increasing temperature, the magnet will gradually lose magnetization until a certain temperature (called the Curie temperature) where the magnetization goes away entirely. In addition to this effect, the domains of the magnet will have a greater chance of changing orientation, further weakening the overall magnetic effect.
the magnet that works better is the cold magnet
Not until the magnet reaches its "Curie point" or temperature. Then magnetic activity ceases.
Yes, it does due to the magnetic force coming from the magnet. After a period of time the magnet that is in lower temperature increases while higher temperatures decrease.
why the magnet change the data from diskette?state the reason.
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Hi I am not an expert but the answer is complicated and it depends on what you are trying to achieve if you need a magnetic field to operate in high temperatures its one thing, if you need a magnet to loose its strength at a specific temperature its another thing you can ask laboratories to mix materials that attract magnets in different proportions and change the temperature at which they stop working here are the temperatures
higher the temperature, lower is the magnetic strength..
As the temperature increases the strength decreases, and vice versa