they work in eg. compasses, fridge doors, and in some handbag clips.
Magnets are used in everyday life for holding items on refrigerators, such as notes and photos.
omg everything
No, there are no magnets in animals.
Some everyday things that use magnets include refrigerator doors, speakers in electronic devices, magnetic clips and closures, and magnetic therapy devices. Magnets are also used in electric motors, credit cards, and MRI machines.
An everyday use for scrap heap magnets is lifting, moving, and separating metal objects, especially iron and steel. In scrapyards and recycling environments, these magnets are commonly attached to cranes to pick up heavy metal items like car parts, beams, and machinery. They can then release the metal by switching the magnet off, making handling efficient and controlled. Another important use is sorting materials. Scrap heap magnets help separate ferrous metals from non-metal items or non-magnetic materials, which improves recycling efficiency and reduces manual labor. In general, facilities such as Kangaroo Copper Recycling apply these same principles, where magnets play a key role in streamlining metal handling, improving sorting accuracy, and supporting the overall recycling process.
These objects use magnets...CompassesSpeakersRefrigeratorsComputersCarsCeiling FansPrintersTelephonesTape RecordersWatches
The things that have suctions like magnets and vacuums are planets.
The only three things that magnets can attract to are iron, nickel, and cobalt.
Because you know how magnets work.
Three things that attract to magnets are things that are made of iron,metal,and heavy things
To type on and do your work just normal everyday things.
Magnets have invisible forces that attract or repel things. They have two ends called poles - a north pole and a south pole. Opposite poles attract each other, while the same poles repel each other. This is why magnets stick to some things but not others.