they are supposed to be a mix of pure metals, such as nickel,zinc,copper and silver.but i have state quarters that do stick to magnets.
Amagnate can stick to certain plates, If there is a plate in your body that magnates can stick to then it has to determine where in the body the plate is. If its near the skin then probably yes, but if its deeper in your body the magnate may not stick
they will not stick together because opposites attract.
Yes, a magnet will stick to galvanized steel. Galvanized steel is steel that has been dipped in molten zinc so it comes out with a zinc coating. (The zinc coating inhibits corrosion.) A magnetic can "reach through" this coating and stick to the steel.
Sterling silver is a non-ferrous metal alloy, so a magnet will not stick to it. Many metals, however, are non-ferrous, so just because a magnet doesn't stick to a particular metal doesn't make it sterling silver.
when we sprinkle iron filingson a magnet,they stick on it but when we sprinkle it near the magnet they arrange around the magnet in definite curved line forming a systematic pattern
No, your fingers cannot stick to a magnet. Only iron or steel objects will stick to a magnet. Your fingers do not have those materials, so it will not stick to a magnet.
a mineral magnet can stick to a magnet because a mineral magnet has to poles the north and the south poles
Please try the rest of the pennies in your pocket change.NO American cent will stick to a magnet except the steel ones minted in 1943. All the rest are either bronze (up to mid-1982) or zinc (mid-1982 to the present) and neither of those materials are attracted to a magnet.
If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
it is a magnet and you just stick it to your fridge
Gold, of any carat weight will not stick to a magnet. Only ferrous metals will stick to a magnet. Gold, aluminum, brass and copper are a few types of non-ferrous metals,and will not stick to a magnet. If your gold sticks to a magnet it is gold plated ferrous metal.
For the same reason no other US cents stick to a magnet, except those dated 1943 - all other cents up to mi-1982 were made of bronze, which isn't a magnetic material.You DID try some other dates first . . . ?
It depends on what silver it is!!CorrectionNo. Silver does not have the right atomic orientation to stick to a magnet.
no
put a stick with a magnet
no magnet cant attract silver