No not at all. In fact some people use magnets to help with their Arthritis. That being said I don't know if it has been tested to be of any help. Also MIRs subject people to very intense magnetic fields.
Iron can be separated with an (electro)magnet.
This is not a change at all. However it is physical when you use a magnet to physically seperate (by manetic force) .
The process by which a iron piece touching a permanent magnet behaves as a magnet as long as it maintains contact is called magnetic induction. not only does this work when the iron is physically touching the magnet but it works as long as the piece of iron remains under the influence of the magnet. A iron piece attracted to a magnet through a paper with out any physical contact will also behave as a magnet.
It depends on a couple things. Was it a small magnet or a large magnet? if the magnet is small enough it can pass threw the intestines and out of the body no problem if not then you have a problem. Second if the magnet was painted of anything like that the you should be concerned about toxins and poisons. Be alert and look for any abnormal symptoms and if any become present take your child the emergence room. Best of luck
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
There is no (proven) danger,especially from a small magnet. If you had a large electro-magnet, maybe.
As long as the magnet is not sharp or too large to fit through your digestive system, no, they are not harmful.
Iron can be separated with an (electro)magnet.
knife shows magnetic property when it remains physically contact with magnet for sometime.this type is known as temporary magnet
This is not a change at all. However it is physical when you use a magnet to physically seperate (by manetic force) .
I don't think so...magnets are very harmful to computers.
The process by which a iron piece touching a permanent magnet behaves as a magnet as long as it maintains contact is called magnetic induction. not only does this work when the iron is physically touching the magnet but it works as long as the piece of iron remains under the influence of the magnet. A iron piece attracted to a magnet through a paper with out any physical contact will also behave as a magnet.
It depends on a couple things. Was it a small magnet or a large magnet? if the magnet is small enough it can pass threw the intestines and out of the body no problem if not then you have a problem. Second if the magnet was painted of anything like that the you should be concerned about toxins and poisons. Be alert and look for any abnormal symptoms and if any become present take your child the emergence room. Best of luck
You can't physically "break" a computer (mother board) with a magnet. However, you can corrupt the hard drive, which is essentially breaking it. But you'll need an extremely strong electromagnet because modern hard drives are shielded against such threats. In other words, a refrigerator magnet won't do it.
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
The magnetic poles of the magnetic domains are physically jarred and realign. They realign randomly. When a material appears to be strongly magnetized it is because these domains are aligned.
a mineral magnet can stick to a magnet because a mineral magnet has to poles the north and the south poles