The main ferromagnetic metals are iron, nickel, and cobalt. The uncommon element gadolinium is magnetic. These form alloys that are also magnetic, such as steel. The rare-earth elements neodymiumand samarium can also form magnetic alloys, and neodymium magnets are among the most powerful of permanent magnets.
*The element titanium is not ferromagnetic. It is paramagnetic, in that it interacts weakly with a magnetic field. Copper ions in solution also demonstrate paramagnetism.
*The elements silver, Mercury, and gold can display diamagnetism, being slightly repelled by a strong magnetic field. Compounds of these elements can display very weak magnetic interactions. They will not display magnetic properties, but become increasingly affected at very low temperatures.
No, a nickel is not ferromagnetic.
No, nickel is not ferromagnetic.
Iron is ferromagnetic and when combined with silver, the resulting alloy loses its ferromagnetic properties.
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No, silver is not ferromagnetic. It is classified as a non-magnetic metal because it does not have strong magnetic properties like ferromagnetic materials such as iron, nickel, and cobalt.
Ferromagnetic elements as Fe, Co, Ni.
It is a metal ,one of the ferromagnetic elements the remaining are iron ,cobalt & gadolinium
No, a nickel is not ferromagnetic.
No, nickel is not ferromagnetic.
No, copper is not ferromagnetic.
Yes, steel is a ferromagnetic material.
No, copper is not a ferromagnetic material.
No, lead is not a ferromagnetic material.
No, pennies are not ferromagnetic because they do not contain enough iron to exhibit magnetic properties. The composition of pennies primarily consists of copper and zinc, which are not magnetic materials.
Iron is ferromagnetic and when combined with silver, the resulting alloy loses its ferromagnetic properties.
Heating a ferromagnetic substance causes the heat to disrupt the magnetic particles thatÊpoint in the same direction and therefore it becames paramagnetic which is barely magnetic at all.
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