It depends on the type of metal it is made from.
Thallium is a non magnetic metal.
yes because it is metal and metal has a magnetic force
A energy/power that pulls a special type of metal together and and also push anothr type away...?
Silver U.S. coins are made entirely of silver and copper -- neither of which is a magnetic metal. Base metal coins that are magnetic, likely contain some amount of iron -- a magnetic metal, or a high concentration of nickel which is also attracted to a magnet.
It depends on the type of metal it is made from.
Sheet metal refers to how the metal is layed out rather than what type of metal. So therefore sheet metal can be made out of metals such as gold, brass, copper and steel. If the type of metal used is magnetic then so is the sheet metal.
Iron, Cobalt and Nickel (Steel is also magnetic, but it is made up of mostly Iron so this is not a main magnetic metal)
the main metal is iron and yes it is magnetic
Gold is not magnetic.
Thallium is a non magnetic metal.
Metallic or non-metallic elements can be magnetic.
Generally, no you can't. A ferromagnetic material has what are called magnetic domains within it. These domains are effectively "tiny magnets" and are randomly arranged when they are in non-magnetized ferromagnetic metals. We can align them and make the material magnetic with the right equipment. A bit of metal that is not ferromagnetic has to domains to realign, so it can't be magnetized.
Silver is a not magnetic metal - the most highly magnetic metal is iron - so no unless the cores of the coins are iron
yes because it is metal and metal has a magnetic force
Only if 1) the metal is magnetic (Iron, Nickel, Cobalt or magnetic alloys) or 2) the metal is carrying current
Radium is a non-magnetic metal.