No, trees are not magnetic in any way.
Yes, birch and aspen trees are related as they both belong to the same botanical family called Betulaceae.
Yes, aspen and birch trees are both part of the same family of trees called the Betulaceae family. They are related in that they share a common ancestry and have similar characteristics, but they are distinct species with their own unique traits.
The same way as all trees form rings.T he years growth forms immediately beneath the bark and shows a a ring. You can therefore tell the age of a tree and what kind of summer they had in any given year by counting and reading the rings either after it is felled or by taking a core sample.
Acorns are the nuts that grow on oak trees, not fruit. Oak trees produce acorns as a way of reproducing and spreading their seeds.
To name just a few of the deciduous or hardwood trees, a rule of thumb is any leaf bearing trees are deciduous. Needle or cone bearing trees are coniferous. Oak Maple Walnut Beech Cherry
No, it does not affect trees in any way. Rubber tappers are sure to leave the tree unharmed in any way. :)
Hydrogen has a magnetic moment due to its single proton in the nucleus. This makes hydrogen weakly magnetic, but its magnetic properties are not significant for most practical purposes.
NO!silly goose!
no, planting trees in a proper way is beneficial.
once you get it you can cut down any small trees if they are in your way!
No, the present physics states that moving charges relatively is the only way to set up a magnetic field.
yes
If there is any effect at all, it would need to be a very tiny one. The only way that the Earth's rotation might affect the Sun would be in the way the Earth's rotation generates Earth's magnetic field. Our magnetic field affects the way that coronal mass ejections, huge bubbles of ionized gas from the Sun, behave when they get close. But the Sun has a magnetic field of its own, much stronger than the Earth's field, and it is unlikely that the Earth's magnetic field would affect the Sun or the Sun's magnetic field in more than a minuscule fashion.
Obviously one tool is your eyes. You can look at the area line of site to see if any trees may be in the way of the signal.
The magnetic compass was made for the people of China to find a way around if any explorores got lost while walking throgh forests and jungles
No, iodine is not magnetic. It is a non-magnetic element and does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials, such as iron or nickel, do.
a compass