see. a paperclip attracts magnets. when you put it underwater it will join together - this is how it attracts. it will repel by moving away from each other
Yes. Neither the glass nor the water shields the paperclipfrom the field of the magnet.
Hydrophobic is when something repels water and hydrophilic is when something attracts water.
No, the polarity of water contrasts with and repels the nonpolar substane that is cyclohexane.
Grease (being mainly a hydrocarbon) is nonpolar, where water is very polar.
Hydrophobic tail of the phospholipid bilayer. Made up of lipids which repels water
Water molecule acts like a magnet because positive attracts positive and negative attracts negative.
Water attracts polar molecules and repels non-polar molecules because water has polar molecules. Water does have a net dipole though it doesn't have net charge.
Yes. Neither the glass nor the water shields the paperclipfrom the field of the magnet.
Hydrophobic is when something repels water and hydrophilic is when something attracts water.
Although it does not appear to be magnetic, water, like all matter, may display magnetic characteristics when exposed to a large enough magnetic field. A extremely powerful magnet repels water by a little amount. You may do this yourself if you have a neodymium magnet.
use a magnet , the paper clips will be attracted to the magnet and the sawdust will not move or u can just pik out the paper clips
The type of organic molecule that repels water is a lipid. It is an non-polar compound and is generally insoluble in water.
triglyceride
Hydrophobic.
no
I think blue attracts water, maybe answer I think.
Still water attracts mosquitoes, they mate in it.