Magnetism is a force not a solid.
what is the magnet ? magnet is the solid substance that attracts the iron.
Assuming you mean electrical conductor / insulator, most bar magnets are made of solid metal, either iron, neodymium or an alloy of aluminium nickel and cobalt, so they conduct electricity. There is one type of magnet called a ferrite magnet which does not conduct electricity - they are the type often found in loudspeakers.
It's hard, solid and u-shaped. It may be a dark black or silvery or orange brown depending on its condition and what it is made out of.
You think probable to magnetic levitation due to interaction of magnetic fields.
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
A Magnet itself is in fact a solid.
a magnet is a solid so you don't freeze it
gas
what is the magnet ? magnet is the solid substance that attracts the iron.
A superconductor.
Answer A magnet is already a solid. You don't freeze a solid. You only freeze liquids.ANSWER 2:The magnetic power of the magnet increases. We can freeze a magnet. The atoms move closer when it freezes.
sOLID GOLD DOES NOT MAGNETISE IM AFRAID.
Lets say you have mixture of sand and salt. Put your mixture on a filter paper and by using a strong magnet you should be able to separate sand from salt. Using a magnet is a powerful way to separate out one solid from another in a mixture.
I don't really know but I think its a magnet
The Hard Disk Drive (HDD) may very well have a magnet in it provided that it is not a Solid State Drive (SSD) or any other form of a hard drive.
Normally permanent magnets are those solid metallic ones we can play with so you can probably get away with calling them an (insert shape here) magnet. e.g. Bar Magnet. As for another name. I don't think it has one. You can't call them electromagnets!
The atoms in a magnet are arranged in some kind of lattice, but the arrangement of the atoms is not what is important. What is important is that the magnetic dipoles of a good portion of the atoms are all "pointing" in the same direction. The aligned atomic magnetic dipoles form groups called magnetic domains, and these are locked in place making the magnet a permanent magnet. It "permanently" holds its magnet field, and is said to be a permanent magnet. And all because the magnetic domains in the ferromagnetic material are largely aligned.