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Magnets can lose their magnetic properties if exposed to high heat or are made subject to high impact. The temperature at which magnets lose magnetic properties is referred to as the Curie Temperature for ferromagnetic materials.
Magnetic keepers can be thought of as materials that complete the magnetic circuit of the magnet. They do this by providing a paramagnetic link from one pole of the magnet to the other. That way the magnet can resist the effects of other magnetic fields that might tend to depolarize or demagnetize it.
U.S. paper money and coin money are both magnetic. They both have magnetic properties, but normal magnets rarely affect them. Mostly the stronger neodymium magnets can pull/affect them. The magnetic part of a U.S. note is near the corners where most the ink is at.
They are natural magnets. The term is used sometimes to indicated that some thing draws a person to it.
Magnets lose their magnetic properties if they are droped down from a height and when they are heated.
they have magnetic properties that weaken with time.
Permanent magnets.
Permanent magnets.
when magnets are kept loose their magnetic power becomes weak. therefore a non magnetic substance should be kept in between of two magnets while storing them. so that there is no continuous attraction or repulsion between them.
Well it would have to be something that also has magnetic properties. Remember that similar poles/charges repel and opposites attract. So as far as what would be attracted by a magnetic force, I would say anything that is metal and has magnetic properties.
Magnets can lose their magnetic properties if exposed to high heat or are made subject to high impact. The temperature at which magnets lose magnetic properties is referred to as the Curie Temperature for ferromagnetic materials.
There is nothing inside magnets. The solid metal has magnetic properties due to it's molecular make up. Magnets are commonly made of iron, but there are more powerful magnets, made from alloys of rare earth metals. The magnetic fiels surround the whole magnetic object.
Permanent magnets
Iron has magnetic properties and magnets will "stick" to it.
it will lose its magnetism OR it will get weaker
Magnetic keepers can be thought of as materials that complete the magnetic circuit of the magnet. They do this by providing a paramagnetic link from one pole of the magnet to the other. That way the magnet can resist the effects of other magnetic fields that might tend to depolarize or demagnetize it.
You are discussing magnets with another person. That person thinks that breaking a magnet will destroy the magnets magnetic properties. Write a conversation you might have with the other person to explain why the person's idea is incorrect.