At least 2,500 deg.
the temperature would be 50 degrees
Stainless steel would be frozen at room temperature because it is a solid. The melting point of stainless steel is about 1510 degrees Celsius, and the melting point is the same as the freezing point. So, at any point below 1510 degrees Celsius, stainless steel is a solid, therefore frozen.
Then the finished product would not be stainless steel.
Then the finished product would not be stainless steel.
No, stainless steel cookie cutters can be safely heated to any oven temperature as long as the cookie cutters have no plastic parts.
Some types of stainless steel are magnetic and some are not. Details are available via the stainless steel article on wikipedia.
There is not a straight forward answer. There are many grades and variants of Stainless steel. The highest contributor to the Anodic index of stainless steel is the amount of Chromium in the different grades. Taking this into consideration, High Chromium content Stainless Steel would have an Anodic index of around 0.50, whiles the lowest grade stainless steel variants would have an Anodic index of around 0.85.
To be absolutely certain one has a stainless steel work table they could get it appraised but an easier way would be to see if it rusts. Stainless steel doesn't rust so if the table is rusted it's not stainless steel.
yes, it becomes stainless steel.
Yes, stainless steel is not magnetic in the same way as materials like iron, nickel, and cobalt. A regular magnet will not stick to stainless steel, although some types of stainless steel can become weakly magnetic through processes like cold-working.
were would you find heavy steel
Yes, magnets can typically be put on a stainless steel refrigerator. However, not all stainless steel is magnetic, so it would depend on the specific alloy used to make the refrigerator. If the stainless steel refrigerator is magnetic, magnets will stick to it.