The things that have suctions like magnets and vacuums are planets.
Magnets can attract to almost anything that contains these 4 things. Steel, Iron, Cobalt, and Nickel.
No.You should find how much it can attract other things.
Answering "Well not all metal are attracted to magnets like chocklate or modelling clay but the things that attracted to magnets is iron nails and steel clip."
Magnetism in the name for metals attracting to each other. Magnets draw other metals and magnets to themselves. It is a powerful bond that can hold something in between the magnets and still hold a connection.
It means how two things attract to each other. Such as the North and South pole of two magnets
Gravity is a force that pulls objects towards each other without direct contact, similar to a magnet or vacuum. Electromagnetic force can also attract or pull objects together without physical contact, such as with magnets. In the context of space, black holes have an intense gravitational pull that can draw in nearby objects and light without touching them.
The hypothesis of magnets is that they contain invisible forces that attract or repel certain metals based on their polarity. This hypothesis explains the observed behavior of magnets interacting with each other and with magnetic materials.
Among other things, electric motors, generators, particle accelerators.
Magnets stick to a magnet or things that has iron in it
Magnets have invisible forces that attract or repel things. They have two ends called poles - a north pole and a south pole. Opposite poles attract each other, while the same poles repel each other. This is why magnets stick to some things but not others.
Oreck replacement backs can only be used on Oreck vacuums, sadly. You can get generic bags for fairly cheap on other vacuums, however.
Magnets stick to materials that are ferromagnetic, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. They can also stick to certain alloys and other magnets. Materials like wood, plastic, and glass are not generally attracted to magnets.