US nickels are not attracted to magnets, as you can easily verify for yourself.
• Iron • Cobalt • Nickel
If you mean the metal, yes. If you mean the coin, no.
Yes, copper is a type of magnet. not very strong if its a coin but strong enough to be attracted to another metal e.g: oid LOL or iron. you can make a magnet by stroking iron! proper fascinating.
From 1982 to 1999 all Canadian nickels were made out of the same 75% copper / 25% nickel alloy used in US nickels. That alloy doesn't contain enough nickel to be attracted to a magnet.
No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
Nickel is attracted to a magnet.
Nickel is the only element among those listed that's attracted to a magnet.
• Iron • Cobalt • Nickel
Yes yes it is............................................. because it has an ability to attacted the magnet
Iron, nickel, cobalt.
anything that has iron, colbalt, steel, or nickel in it
nickel iron cobalt
iron, cobalt and nickel but any compound with any of these in like steel, which contains iron, are attracted to a magnet.
If you mean the metal, yes. If you mean the coin, no.
Objects that are attracted to a magnet are ferrous metals. This means they are composed of elements like iron, nickel, and silver.
=No not all metals are attracted to a magnet for example tin isn't attracted to a magnet. Hopes this helps a bit.=
Aluminium is not attracted by a magnet, due to the molecular structures that it forms. Metals which can be readily attracted include iron, cobalt, and nickel, although compounds of these will demonstrate significant differences in magnetism.