Anything except iron, nickel, and cobalt.
If you have a magnet, you can see if the magnet is attracted to the material in question.A diamagnetic substance can be identified by weak repulsion in the presence of a magnetic field.A non magnetic substance has no effect in the presence of a magnetic field provided the field is weak.Because if the field is strong enough the tiny electronic magnets may get rearranged so as to have an effect.
One example of a 5-letter magnetic material is nickel. Nickel is a ferromagnetic metal that exhibits magnetic properties, making it suitable for various applications such as in magnets and magnetic alloys.
Iron is a metal with high magnetic power. It is capable of being magnetized and retains its magnetism well, making it a common material for magnets and magnetic applications.
Yes, coat hangers are usually made of metal which can be magnetic if it contains iron. Some metal coat hangers may be magnetic while others may not depending on the material they are made of.
No, it is not. However, when it is at very very low temperatures, it may display some weak magnetic properties.
Gold is not a magnetic material. It is a non-magnetic metal, meaning it does not attract or repel magnets like iron or nickel.
Pewter is not magnetic. It is mostly made of tin which is a non magnetic material.
A magnetic material becomes a magnet when its magnetic domains align in the same direction, creating a net magnetic field. This alignment can be induced by placing the material in a strong external magnetic field or by rubbing it against an existing magnet. This results in the material exhibiting magnetic properties itself, attracting or repelling other magnetic materials.
Anything magnetic and a metal object.
To make a metal magnet, you can create a temporary magnet by stroking a metal material (like iron) with a permanent magnet in the same direction. This aligns the magnetic domains in the metal. For a more permanent magnet, you can heat the metal to a specific temperature and then cool it in the presence of a magnetic field to enhance its magnetic properties.
The force exerted by a magnet on a metal object is known as magnetic force, which arises from the interaction of the magnet's magnetic field with the magnetic properties of the metal. This force can attract or repel the object, depending on the nature of the metal and the orientation of the magnetic field. The strength of the magnetic force depends on factors such as the distance between the magnet and the object, the strength of the magnet, and the magnetic properties of the material being attracted.
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.