Obviously no.
You can demagnetize a magnet by: -dropping it many times -heating it over a flame -hammering it many times
By placing Iron in a strong magnetic field, the field will turn the iron into a magnet. If you melt the iron and then allow it to resolidify, it will drop the magnetic charge (and you can charge it again if you wish).
Drop it on the floor a few times.Hit it with a hammer a few times.Heat it red hot in the stove flame.Wrap several turns of wire around it and run a high AC current through for a while.
I don't think any chemicals can do that. Magnetism can change how electrons are exchanged (it has to be one extreme magnet though). But I have never heard of anyone lessening magnetic force with chemicals.
"It is best to demagnetize metal objects before using them around magnetic tape drives." "Heat tends to demagnetize ferrous minerals."
no you can't
By keeping them in magnet keepers
Bring it to me. I will do my "special technique" to demagnetize it. You know, sell it and not give you any of the money. Gold isn't magnetic, so if you got some that IS it's got iron in it.
It means to make something not magnetic anymore
lucky rabbit's foot
Obviously no.
No. Steel is mostly iron.
demagnetize
you rub a piece of sand paper on it
We demagnetize our instruments with a commercially purchased demagnetizers.
What do I need too do