Want this question answered?
you rub a piece of sand paper on it
'Ductile". (Normally applied to substances, not objects.)
Inertia guarantees that an object at rest will remain at rest and an object in motion will remain in that same motion, so long as there is no external force acting on that object. Alternately, there could be force acting on it as long as that force adds up to zero.
No. What we call 'inertia' is actually a manifestation of the object's mass,which doesn't change (as long as the object isn't moving at some seriousfraction of light speed).
Sure, as long as the sum of the forces is zero.
If the iron atoms are aligned then the object is magnetic, if they are randomly oriented then it is not. How the object was manufactured may be the cause of the difference, but it always possible to intentionally either magnetize OR demagnetize an object.
If the iron atoms are aligned then the object is magnetic, if they are randomly oriented then it is not. How the object was manufactured may be the cause of the difference, but it always possible to intentionally either magnetize OR demagnetize an object.
"It is best to demagnetize metal objects before using them around magnetic tape drives." "Heat tends to demagnetize ferrous minerals."
If the iron atoms are aligned then the object is magnetic, if they are randomly oriented then it is not. How the object was manufactured may be the cause of the difference, but it always possible to intentionally either magnetize OR demagnetize an object.
no you can't
De-magnetization refers to the removal of magnetic properties from an object. One way to de-magnetize something is to heat the object.
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.