Nothing happens, it does not attract.
A magnet does not adhere to copper!
It is not possible.
I have just taken the test and the answer is.. b.) unaffected by the magnet The copper bar will become reactive if/when magnet is in motion. example; if strong magnet is slid swiftly along copper bar by hand, reaction will occur as a reactive force or drag and can be easily observed by anyone willing to test it themselves. This reaction is a form of Induction.
This effect has nothing to do with the magnet sticking to the side of the copper. Magnets will only stick to ferromagnetic substances such as iron and steel, not copper. The actual physics of this experiment is more subtle. The magnet falling down the tube results in a changing magnetic field within the copper tube. This changing magnetic field produces a current within the tube. That current creates a new magnetic field within the tube which slows down the magnet.
Copper is an example of a non-ferrous metal.Non-ferrous metals do not contain any iron and are not attracted to a magnet.
Nothing. Copper is not magnetic.
Nothing - copper is not magnetic.
your phone screen goes off but comes back on.
The copper wire carries an electric current.
Absolutely nothing since copper is non-magnetic.
It might leave a copper coloured streak across the magnet, but apart from that, nothing much. I think you are looking at what happens to a copper wire when it is moved in a magnetic field. In which case the answer is, a current is induced in the wire. (It does not have to touch)
No it does not attract to magnets
No. Copper is not attracted to a magnet.
one of them hyas copper in it's name >:D
According to different conductors, magnet wires can be divided into copper-based magnet
A magnet does not adhere to copper!
Iron is a ferromagnetic metal, and copper is not. Iron will be attracted to the magnet but the copper will not.