The paper money of some countries may have magnetic characteristics as part of their anti-counterfeiting methods. The paper money of other countries does not.
Iron has magnetic domains, that tend to align when the iron is in a magnetic field. Many other materials don't have such magnetic domains.
It doesn't. It is just a myth.
because when put in a vending machine, there is a way to determine if it really is a real dollar. counterfit money has no iron.
Magnetic materials: -steel -iron -nickel -cobalt Non-magnetic materials: -aluminum -copper -zinc -gold -silver -wood -plastic -glass Note: Not all forms of Iron are magnetic.
Most folding currency, such as the US dollar bill, is made of paper. Because paper money needs to be durable, paper money is made of higher-quality paper, with longer fibers than wood-pulp papers and usually a high linen content. Some countries are beginning to use folding money made from plastics. Many other things are made of paper. For example: posters, flyers, catalogs, cards, books, boxes, and bags.
Paper is not affected by magnetic fields.
no. Paper bags are usually constructed using paper and cloth (for the handle) which are both not magnetic.
super-fast postal service and paper money and gunpowder and magnetic compass and the stirrup
You can infer nothing about a magnetic field from paper alone, or about paper from a magnetic field. If you put iron filings on a horizontal sheet of paper and put a magnet below the paper, you may be able to visualize the magnetic field of the magnet and thus infer its dipole arrangement.
If the paper clip is made of a magentic metal such as steele, then you cn make it magnetic. If it is made of plastic or a non-magnetic metal, then you cannot.
NO....... Chinese did. No European country invented printing press, paper, magnetic compass, gunpowder, etc... before the Chinese did. Chinese were the greatest inventors of all time.
Similar to how a pen can write on paper, a magnet can "write" on a magnetic material. And just as your eyes, or a camera can pick up the markings on a paper, there are things that can "see" the magnetic markings left by the first magnet.
paper money paper money
Metal
Yes
No, they are made of wood or paper, and are not magnetic. An iron nail is attracted to a magnet, and can become magnetized.
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.