answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The ferromagnetic metals are iron, cobalt, nickel, gadolinium, dysprosium and holmium. These metals are capable of holding a strong magnetic field.

There are many ferromagnetic alloys that contain one or more of these metals along with other elements that are capable of holding even stronger magnetic fields than the pure metals themselves. This is due to the other elements in the alloy allowing larger domains to form.

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What other metals are magnetic apart from nickel and cobalt?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Natural Sciences

Apart from iron nickel and steel which other metals are magnetic and which is the odd one out?

steel,tin ,cobalt ,chromium...


Name 3 magnetic metals?

All ferrous metals like iron, steel and to some extent stainless steel. Nickel and cobalt are magnetic too. Apart from these there are rare magnetic earths or rocks like 'neodymium'. Magnetite, which was first used by man as a magnetic material (for compass-like purposes) is an oxide of iron. In New Zealand all our "copper" coins are magnetic. This would apply to the coins of any country where they contain high levels of nickel. I once lived on a property in Queensland where lumps of 'gravel' would often cling to my spade ... the soil was heavily laden with magnetite!


What other metals apart from iron may be attracted to a magnet?

materials like copper ,alloys and other materials like iron r magnetic.


What type of metal is not attracted to a magnet?

Sure. Like aluminum? Most commercially available aluminum contains some other materials, but only accidental traces of iron, if any. Copper, silver, and gold, same story. You mean 'alloys' not metals - no pure metal contains iron aside from iron itself as they are just elements as opposed to compounds.


Why is a steel attracted to a magnet?

Magnets are just certain minerals that create a strong magnetic field. Everything in the universe, down to our atoms, creates a magnetic field (which is why you can't walk through walls, even though the atoms in you are relatively far apart from one another). Some metals (such as iron) have a magnetic field that is attracted to the field from a magnet. So, the two objects, if given the opportunity, will try to go nearer to each other.

Related questions

Apart from iron nickel and steel which other metals are magnetic and which is the odd one out?

steel,tin ,cobalt ,chromium...


Name 3 magnetic metals?

All ferrous metals like iron, steel and to some extent stainless steel. Nickel and cobalt are magnetic too. Apart from these there are rare magnetic earths or rocks like 'neodymium'. Magnetite, which was first used by man as a magnetic material (for compass-like purposes) is an oxide of iron. In New Zealand all our "copper" coins are magnetic. This would apply to the coins of any country where they contain high levels of nickel. I once lived on a property in Queensland where lumps of 'gravel' would often cling to my spade ... the soil was heavily laden with magnetite!


What other metals apart from iron may be attracted to a magnet?

materials like copper ,alloys and other materials like iron r magnetic.


Does magnets stick to aluminum?

Despite aluminum being the most abundant metal on Earth, it does not interact with magnetic materials. The reason is a little complicated , but basically it's because the atoms, specifically the electrons, in solid aluminum are too far apart from each other to induce cohesive allignment of their magnetic dipoles. Hence the overall magnetic effects of the electron average out to zero, even in the presence of common magnets.


How do you tell recycled metals apart?

Use a magnet. Steel and Iron are very magnetic. Aluminum is never magnetic. Brass is slightly magnetic.


How can you separate cobalt and sugar?

By keeping them apart


What type of metal is not attracted to a magnet?

Sure. Like aluminum? Most commercially available aluminum contains some other materials, but only accidental traces of iron, if any. Copper, silver, and gold, same story. You mean 'alloys' not metals - no pure metal contains iron aside from iron itself as they are just elements as opposed to compounds.


Why is a steel attracted to a magnet?

Magnets are just certain minerals that create a strong magnetic field. Everything in the universe, down to our atoms, creates a magnetic field (which is why you can't walk through walls, even though the atoms in you are relatively far apart from one another). Some metals (such as iron) have a magnetic field that is attracted to the field from a magnet. So, the two objects, if given the opportunity, will try to go nearer to each other.


Do sunspots occur in magnetic pairs?

Sometimes, it depends on how far apart the two magnetic poles are.


How do you reduce the strength of magnetic field?

you spread them apart.


Why does the earth rotate along its magnetic meridian?

It doesn't. The north pole and the north magnetic pole are miles apart.


If two materials have a weak magnetic domain?

If two materials have a weak magnetic domain then their lines of force will be sketched as farther apart. This is the convention for drawings of magnetic fields.