Thread is usually made of fibres such as cotton, polyester or silk. None of these are magnetic. The only common magnetic materials are iron (and some steels), cobalt and nickel. You can make these metals into very fine wires, but you wouldn't normally call them thread.
A suspended magnet is usually a magnet suspended by a thin thread and allowed to rotate and swing freely. This will align itself to the Earth's magnetic field providing there is no other magnetic or electromagnetic influnence.
I found this answer in a dictionary:# ## A cylinder of wood, plastic, cardboard, or other material on which wire, thread, or string is wound. ## The amount of wire, thread, or string wound on such a cylinder. ## Something similar to such a cylinder in shape or function. # A reel for magnetic tape.I hope this helps answer the question.
The circular loop of wire carrying current will align itself in a plane perpendicular to the direction of the magnetic field created by the current flowing through the loop. This is a result of the magnetic force exerted on the current-carrying loop in the presence of the magnetic field.
No. Despite many Internet conspiracy rumors claiming otherwise, US bills do not have magnetic ink, bar codes, or RFID chips. Modern bills $5 and higher DO have special strips that glow under UV light and watermarks, and bills $10 and higher have special inks that change color when you tilt the bill.
There are many different thread forms in use today. The most common are; BPV thread API thread profile gauge Thread profile gauge API 5b thread gauges API thread gauges Pipe thread gauges API Thread Gauge Manufacturer & Supplier Ring gauge use Pipe threader Acme thread Feeler gauge set Ring gauge set threaded pipe plug step gauge NPT thread gauge Tapered pipe thread
EUE thread is a pressure sealed thread as usual completion pup joints thread
Fine Thread and Course Thread
thread
yes cotton thread is stronger than polycotton thread
No, a thread can't create aprocess, because the environment of the thread is a part of a process which created this thread.
To determine the size of a thread, you can use a thread gauge tool or a caliper to measure the diameter of the thread. The size is typically expressed in terms of the thread's pitch and diameter, which can help you identify the thread size.
The special thread a dispatcher will execute when no ready thread is found.