Use a magnet to remove the iron shavings.
tiny pieces of iron
The iron shavings get temporarily magnetized, due to the influence of the magnet. Thus, you have two magnets attracting each other - the original magnet, and a piece of iron shaving.
use a magnet
An iron shaving is a very tiny piece of iron that has been shaved off of something. Iron shavings are commonly found in welding.
The iron in total cereal is elemental iron shavings which can be extracted from the cereal with a strong magnet after it has been ground to a powder and mixed with water.
Yes. Absolutely yes. A magnet forms something called a 'magnetic field' you can expiriment and view this easily by taking a piece of paper and applying a thin layer of iron shavings, then put a magnet below the paper, you will see the iron shavings adhere to the magnetic field of the magnet.
You would use a magnet and the magnet will attract the iron since its magnetic the sand would stay michael Zender
You would use a magnet and the magnet will attract the iron since its magnetic the sand would stay michael Zender
Technicly a black hole doesnt have weight it is a rip in the space time continuum. You have to think of it like this if you put iron shavings on a piece of paper they will stay where you put them however if you put a magnet under the paper the shavings will go towards the magnet, this represents gravity but if you cut a hole in the paper where the magnet is the iron shavings will get sucked off of the paper and stuck to the magnet. This is representative of the tiny fraction of th cosmos around any one black hole
you can make a collage and put the shavings on it
They are most commonly referred to as "eraser shavings".