Some minerals contain magnetite, which is atracted to magnets.
Most CD players use electromagnetic switches called relays. Have you ever turned on the power on your CD player or another appliance, and heard a click immediately before it went on? That's a relay doing its job. In a relay, a small current runs through a coil which is right next to a switch with a magnet in it. The coil pulls on the switch, closing it and turning on the device. Relays are useful because they use a small current to control a much larger one. As a result, they are often used in the power supplies of electronic devices such as CD Players
No. For a metal to be magnetic it has to contain iron. Gold does not contain iron.
From 1982 to 1999 all Canadian nickels were made out of the same 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy used in US nickels. That alloy doesn't contain enough nickel to be attracted to a magnet.
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
no
A DVD. Apex.
Yes, some electric can openers contain a magnet to keep the lid from falling to the counter when the can opener cuts if off.
a cd
No they don't.
No, yeast is not attracted to a magnet as yeast does not contain any metallic material
It should contain music
A CD can contain 99 tracks
Ones that contain IRON
Materials which contain iron, generally. These metals that work with a magnet are generally called "Ferrous" metals
A CD is a way to store data. So if a virus has been written on the CD, then it can.
if a block of metal is attracted to a magnet it must have flowing charged particles (electrons)