Four common magnetic materials that are strongly attracted to a magnet are iron, nickel, cobalt, and certain alloys of these metals. This is because these materials have unpaired electrons in their atomic or molecular structure, which creates a magnetic moment. When a magnet is nearby, the magnetic field of the magnet aligns the magnetic moments of these materials, causing them to be strongly attracted to the magnet.
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
Sure. Heat is tiny movements at the molecular level. A magnetic field want all the atoms to share their electrons in the same direction, therefore stabilizing the heat movements.
Iron(III) bromide is an ionic compound.
CH3OH is molecular.
The arrangement of molecules in a magnet makes itself a magnet.if u want to know further,try searching "Ewing's molecular theory of magnetism".
all the molecules of a magnetic substance is an independent magnet. in an unmagnetized magnetic substance, the molecular magnets are randomly oriented. they form dosed chains so they neutralize the effect of each other. these chains are called domains and each molecular magnet is called dipole. when a substance is magnetized, the molecular magnets are arranged in one direction by breaking the domains. the end where all the north poles of the dipoles are present becomes the north pole of the magnet. the other end where south pole of the dipoles are present becomes the south pole of the magnet. when the magnet is strongly heated or hammered the kinetic energy of the molecules increases and therefore the molecules alignment gets disrupted and the molecules go back to the closed chain arrangement to form domains and thus the magnet gets demagnetized :) thank you.
A superconductor.
Aluminium is not attracted by a magnet, due to the molecular structures that it forms. Metals which can be readily attracted include iron, cobalt, and nickel, although compounds of these will demonstrate significant differences in magnetism.
As we know every particle is made up of tiny particles called atoms,each magnet is made up of tiny particles called Molecular magnets.Each of them acts as a individual magnet with North and South poles.There arrangement decides the polarity of the magnets
Four common magnetic materials that are strongly attracted to a magnet are iron, nickel, cobalt, and certain alloys of these metals. This is because these materials have unpaired electrons in their atomic or molecular structure, which creates a magnetic moment. When a magnet is nearby, the magnetic field of the magnet aligns the magnetic moments of these materials, causing them to be strongly attracted to the magnet.
A magnet is produced by aligning the magnetic domains in a material to point in the same direction. When heated, the magnet loses its magnetism as the molecular motion, which is caused by heating, destroys the alignment of the magnetic domains. Ferromagnetic materials also lose its magnetism after being melted. However, when the magnet is being hammered whilst cooling in a magnetic field, the melted magnet would gain its magnetism again.
A paperclip attracts a magnet ,a magnet attracts a paperclip.
Sure. Heat is tiny movements at the molecular level. A magnetic field want all the atoms to share their electrons in the same direction, therefore stabilizing the heat movements.
a mineral magnet can stick to a magnet because a mineral magnet has to poles the north and the south poles
Iron(III) bromide is an ionic compound.
if you have a magnet and a magnetic matereal, rub the magnet from one end of it to the other. do this several times and it will eventualy be a magnet.