yes because any that you do in magnet it is magnet again'
physical change
physical, just the aligning of magnetic domains what were previously random in orientation.
It is a physical property >.<
Magnetism is a physical property that is mediated by magnetic fields.The magnetic state of a material depends on temperature (and other variables, such as pressure and the applied magnetic field), so a material may exhibit more than one form of magnetism depending on its temperature, etc. However, a material's magnetism doesn't change the composition, and doesn't involve a chemical reaction.
J. E. H. Gordon has written: 'A physical treatise on electricity and magnetism' -- subject- s -: Electricity, Magnetism 'A physical treatise on electricity and magnetism' -- subject- s -: Electricity, Magnetism
Take a strong magnet, and rub it across the weak one and it'll make it stronger. You can weaken or destroy an on objects magnetism with heat or with physical shock such as banging it with something or on something.
physical change
Magnetism is a physical property because attracting something to a magnet does not change the substance (change of the composition) itself and doesn't involve chemical reactions. The magnetic state of a material depends on temperature (and other variables, such as pressure and the applied magnetic field), so a material may exhibit more than one form of magnetism depending on its temperature, etc. However, the magnetism doesn't change the substance itself.
Magnetism is a physical property that is mediated by magnetic fields.The magnetic state of a material depends on temperature (and other variables, such as pressure and the applied magnetic field), so a material may exhibit more than one form of magnetism depending on its temperature, etc. However, a material's magnetism doesn't change the composition, and doesn't involve a chemical reaction.
Every substance has the physical property of magnetism to some extent. Metals can be magnetized more than other elements or compounds.
Yes, iron is a ferromagnetic metal.
high temperature, AC magnetic fields, mechanical shocks, and physical distortion.