No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
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.
lodestones and metal
A) stationary electric charge B) moving electric charge C) stationary magnet D) a moving magnet
Most of the outer electrons in the metal alloy that make up the magnet spin in the same direction and in the same plane. This causes a magnetic field to surround the magnet. This magnetic field interacts with the outer electrons in other materials and if they too can be made to spin in the sme direction and will be attracted to the magnet. If the other material is a permanent magnet the fields can interact to attract each other or repel each other.
Iron can be converted in to magnet.
magnetic field
No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
It attracts ferrous materials.
Materials which contain iron, generally. These metals that work with a magnet are generally called "Ferrous" metals
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.
lodestones and metal
Materials with high coercivity and high retentivity.
the 4 magnetic materials are iron, steel, copper and nickel
A magnet attracts other metal objects to it. This is done by combining the following materials: iron, boron, and neodymium. These materials make a magnet, and a magnet can also be made by rapping a copper wire around iron and running electricity through it, making an electromagnet.
A) stationary electric charge B) moving electric charge C) stationary magnet D) a moving magnet
No, your fingers cannot stick to a magnet. Only iron or steel objects will stick to a magnet. Your fingers do not have those materials, so it will not stick to a magnet.