Most fridge doors are made of steel which is magnetic. When you bring N/S pole of Magnet near the door it creates oppposite ple S/N on the door and due to attractive force the manet sticks to the fridge.
Magnets will stick to most wrenches.
most refrigerator doors are magnetic
Because most refrigerators are made of ferromagnetic materials, and ferromagnetic materials are attracted to magnets.
One of the most common use for magnets is on cupboard doors to hold them closed you will also find magnets in lots of electrical devices because they are a main component in speakers of all sizes even the tiny ones used in phones. I could go on and on but you only asked for one and I gave you two.
Magnets are made up of ferromagnetic materials (iron, nickel, cobalt, neodymium alloys, etc.) or even semipermanent magnets. Each of these has a material that has some degree of magnetic permanence, where the spins of the electrons in the substance all align to generate a magnetic field. Refrigerators are made up of ferrous materials, to which magnets can stick, due to magnetic attraction.
Magnets will stick to most wrenches.
most refrigerator doors are magnetic
Sticking things on refrigerators, some toys have magnets, there are magnets in computers and in TVs, certain doors have magnets, and most electronics have magnets.
Because most refrigerators are made of ferromagnetic materials, and ferromagnetic materials are attracted to magnets.
Magnets are actually used in most of the items we use today, such as: * car doors * door hinges * computers * hoovers * blenders * CD players * washing machines * fax machines * escalators * elevators * loud speakers * credit cards * TVs * fridge doors * toys * jewelry * electric toothbrushes * junk yards * Roller Coasters *fridge magnets
It is magnetism. Remember, most metals don't stick to magnets. Iron (and steel), and cobalt and nickel do, but none of the other common ones do.
There is a magnet-lined door seal on most refrigerators and there are magnets in the electric motor that runs the cooling compressor, There may be a few small magnets on the doors sticking on that picture of a bunny rabbit your daughter drew for you.
First of all magnes discovered magnets and two like poles of a magnet never attract. you can see the tips of the magnets are the poles they are the places where most magnetic things stick Thanks Gaurang
One of the most common use for magnets is on cupboard doors to hold them closed you will also find magnets in lots of electrical devices because they are a main component in speakers of all sizes even the tiny ones used in phones. I could go on and on but you only asked for one and I gave you two.
Magnets are actually used in most of the items we use today, such as: * car doors * door hinges * computers * hoovers * blenders * CD players * washing machines * fax machines * escalators * elevators * loud speakers * credit cards * TVs * fridge doors * toys * jewelry * electric toothbrushes * junk yards * roller coasters *fridge magnets
Magnets are made up of ferromagnetic materials (iron, nickel, cobalt, neodymium alloys, etc.) or even semipermanent magnets. Each of these has a material that has some degree of magnetic permanence, where the spins of the electrons in the substance all align to generate a magnetic field. Refrigerators are made up of ferrous materials, to which magnets can stick, due to magnetic attraction.
at the poles