Its Curie Temperature is below any amount of cold you're likely to come across. It can't sustain magnetism at room temperature.
The only metals that can are iron, nickel, cobalt, and gadolinium.
" No copper isn't a magetic material " . From the science research scientists have concluded this .
Some non-magnetic metals: aluminium, copper, lead, tin, titanium, zinc, brass, bronze, gold, and silver
Iron is magnetic but copper isn't. So I guess iron powder is magnetic while copper powder isn't.:)
It non magnetic
Non magnetic!!
" No copper isn't a magetic material " . From the science research scientists have concluded this .
it produces a magnetic field. i think that if current is passed through the wire it can attract pieces of iron
Non magnetic material is the one which cannot be easily magnetized even with intense magnetic field around it.
Copper is a non-ferrous metal and considered as non-magnetic. It is paramagnetic and has a very small magnetic response but it is too small to induce any magnetism.
Most Copper and its alloys is non magnetic at room temperature.
Absolutely nothing since copper is non-magnetic.
Non- Magnetic -Lead -Crome -Zinc -Copper -Aluminum -Tin (Sn) Magnetic -Iron -Cobalt -Nickel -Steel -Law.
Anything with iron in it is magnetic, or can be magnetized. Copper is non-ferrous metal and is not magnetic, although it is a good conductor of electricity and can be used to generate electromagnetic fields.
Some non-magnetic metals are: aluminium, platinum, copper, lead.
Some non-magnetic metals: aluminium, copper, lead, tin, titanium, zinc, brass, bronze, gold, and silver
This is because modern pennies are not entirely copper, they are nickel with a copper coating.
The non-magnetic pre-1992 'Bronze' Penny and Two Pence coins are made of copper, tin and zinc. British 1 Penny and 2 Pence coins were made from copper-plated steel from 1992 and can all be attracted to a magnet, although the coins themselves are not magnetic.