i t h i n k i t h a s a n o r t h a n d s o u t h p o l e
It is no longer magnetic.
An object is non-magnetic if it does not attract to a magnet.
It depends what you mean, but.... ---- Magnetic ---- it could be when you make something magnetic, or when the magnetic field of a magnet attracts a piece of Iron or steel
No, salt cannot be separated from something else with a magnet. Salt is not magnetic and does not respond to magnetic fields.
Yes. It is magnetic. but if you put a magnet or something magnetic up to it. Good Luck. It will wipe your hard drive out for good.
When something becomes magnetized, its atoms align in a way that creates a magnetic field. This can attract or repel other magnetic materials and potentially create a new magnetic material.
The term "magnetic" cannot be applied to something like a cookie. "Magnetic" refers to the ability of iron molecules to align in response to a magnetic field. Cookies are a food and as such are not metal or magnetic.
You can test if something is silver using a magnet (silver is not magnetic), a magnet test (silver is not magnetic), or by looking for hallmark stamps indicating silver content. Professional testing or a jeweler’s assessment can also confirm if something is silver.
Gases, and so air which is a mixture of gases (at normal temperature and pressure) are not magnetic.
To magnetize something, you can rub a magnet along the object in the same direction multiple times. This will align the magnetic domains within the material, making it magnetic.
substances that only become magnetic when something that IS magnetic is put close to them. like your fridge is an example
Something is either magnetized or not magnetized. There is no such thing as "unmagnetized magnetic" material.