Anything ferrous (containing Iron)
no, Copper is not magnetic unless it is mixed with a magnetic metal, such as iron or nickel.
Answer:
The new Neodymium magnets are strong enough to interact with copper or aluminum. A disk Neodnium magnet will slide down a sheet of copper or aluminum much slower than a comparably sized disk of other material. This results from electric currents being set up in the metal by the passing magnet. The resulting magnetic field holds the magnet. Similarly a Neodymium will attract a penny as it is pulled away from it due to transient electric currents.
magnetite can attract steel, iron, metal anything that made out of metal because of its magnet like features
magnets can atract steel or iron
it can also attract metals like cobalt
Magnets attract and are attracted to some metals.
Magnets attract all Ferromagnetic materials like Iron, Nickel and Cobalt.
The diaphaneity of magnetite is opaque.
Magnetite has fracture not cleavage. ChaCha on!
Magnetite is classified as an oxide.
Attracted by a magnetSpecifically a diamond is the allotrope carbon of where the carbon atoms are arranged in the specific type of cubic lattice called diamond cubic. Diamond is an optically isotropic crystal that is transparent to opaque. I might be wrong though! But im not sure what this has to do with attracting a magnet...
Magnetite is an ore of iron, and therefore has economic value.
cobalt and other minerals with traces of iron ions
Some minerals contain magnetite, which is atracted to magnets.
Generally not, through magnetite and, to a lesser degree, hematite, are attracted to magnets.
Magnetite (lodestone) is the most magnetic of all the naturally occurring minerals on Earth and will attract small pieces of iron.
a magnet Actually named magnetite, but it is a natural magnet.
none of them. iron can be magnetised but the material itself is not magnetic
magnetite magnetite magnetite magnetite magnetite magnetite magnetite magnetite
Generally speaking, any ferro-, ferri-, or para- magnetic material. (Where the curie temperature is above the material temperature.
Generally speaking, any ferro-, ferri-, or para- magnetic material. (Where the curie temperature is above the material temperature.
Magnetite is Fe3O4.
The diaphaneity of magnetite is opaque.
Magnetite has a metallic luster.