Cobalt, iron, and nickel exhibit ferromagnetism at reasonable temperatures. Check the Wikipedia article on "ferromagnetism", for additional materials that exhibit ferromagnetism - some of them are compounds, and some only exhibit ferromagnetism at temperatures that are too low for many practical uses (for example, Dysprosium requires a temperature below 88 kelvin).
steel, iron and everything that's like metal
Anything with iron in it like steel, for example. (Or iron, too . . . )
Ferromagnetic metals
Copper, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc and many more.
Some magnets are metal. Not all magnets are metal (though I can't offhand think of any magnets that don't at least contain metal), and not all metals are magnets.
No. Magnets do not attract gold, silver, aluminum, brass, copper or lead. Magnets will attract nickel and iron or steel.
Magnetism is a condition of being, not a type of metal, and metals don't typically attract metals. Anything containing iron can become magnetized. All it takes is exposing it to a magnet or applying a DC current to a coil wrapped around it.
Magnets are made from magnetic materials. These are metals that can be magnetised or will be attracted to a magnet. Most materials are not magnetic, but iron, cobalt and nickelare magnetic. Steel is mostly iron, so steel is magnetic too.
Metals that are attracted by magnets or that can be turned into magnets are as follows: 1-iron 2-cobalt 3-nickel 4-steel (a compound not an element)
The 3 metals attracted to magnets are : Iron Nickel & Cobalt
that why you gi to school :D
Magnets can be made from many different metals so there is no specific atomic mass.
No, most permanent magnets are made of Iron or NIckel compounds. They are inorganic metals or metallic compounds.
Unpaired electons (which is to say, electrons not paired with another electron of opposite spin).
No, most permanent magnets are made of Iron or NIckel compounds. They are inorganic metals or metallic compounds.
Copper, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc and many more.
Ferrous metals are attraced to magnets due to their IRON content.
No. Pennies were made of copper (Now US pennies are made of copper plated zinc) Magnets are made of iron or other ferro-magnetic metals.
They are called ferromagnets or permanent magnets. They are also called man-made or synthetic magnets. If you're on A+, the correct answer is ferromagnets. - Dawn Ayers
they are called conductive metals