God knows
Vanadium is attracted to magnets i.e. it is ferromagnetic.
No, sulfur is not attracted to magnets because it is not a ferromagnetic material. Ferromagnetic materials, like iron, nickel, and cobalt, are attracted to magnets due to their unique atomic structure that allows them to align with magnetic fields.
Only to a very limited extent, assuming it's actually made of copper.Copper is a paramagnetic material. Paramagnetic materials are attracted to magnets, but only very weakly. US pennies are mostly zinc with a thin copper cladding (and have been since 1982). Zinc is actually diamagnetic, meaning it's very weakly repelled by a magnet. Even pennies prior to 1982 which were solid copper weren't attracted to a magnet strongly enough to notice without very accurate measuring devices, though.
If it's plating and not an alloy, it should depend on the thickness of the plating, since steel is attracted by magnets and copper is not.
No, sulfur is not attracted to magnets. Sulfur is a non-magnetic material, which means it does not have magnetic properties and will not be attracted to magnets.
No. Iron-containing metals are attracted to magnets.
Copper and aluminum are not attracted to magnets because they are non-magnetic materials. Unlike iron, nickel, or cobalt, which are attracted to magnets, copper and aluminum do not have magnetic properties.
No. Magnets do not attract gold, silver, aluminum, brass, copper or lead. Magnets will attract nickel and iron or steel.
Copper is not attracted to magnets because it is a non-ferrous metal, meaning it does not contain significant amounts of iron. Only materials containing iron, nickel, or cobalt are attracted to magnets.
No, not all metals are attracted to magnets. Only certain metals, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt, are attracted to magnets due to their magnetic properties. Other metals, like aluminum, copper, and gold, are not attracted to magnets.
No. Brass is not ferromagnetic, as it is an alloy of the metals copper and zinc.
Metals and other magnets are the only objects that are attracted to magnets. However, many metals are NOT attracted to magnets. Copper, stainless steel, brass, gold, silver, zinc, and aluminum are a few metals that are NOT attracted to magnets. The best way to discover if the object will be attracted to a magnet is to introduce it to a magnet.
The iron nail would stick to a magnet. Copper is not attracted to magnets.
Magnets stick to materials that are ferromagnetic, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. They can also stick to materials that are attracted to magnets, like steel. Materials like copper, aluminum, and plastic are not attracted to magnets.
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.
Vanadium is attracted to magnets i.e. it is ferromagnetic.
Cu is slightly diamagnetic -- has a small tendency to repel magnets, so no, not a magnetic material.