"Palladium is considered weakly magnetic. It exhibits a very small magnetic susceptibility. It is not considered to be a ferromagnetic material. Contaminants can, however, make Pd show ferromagnetism."
http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090616131837AAqvOVH
"Yes, it is attracted to magnets, but, in itself, it is not magnetic, nor can it be made magnetic. It is in a class of metals called "paramagnetic"
The Wikipedia articles can answer it much better than I can."
No. Magnets do not attract gold, silver, aluminum, brass, copper or lead. Magnets will attract nickel and iron or steel.
Vacuum has no effect on the actions of magnets.
magnets dont lose their magnetism under water. According to me magnets do attract paper under water.
polar opposites attract. that's where the phrase "opposites attract" comes from.AnswerThere are no such things as 'positive' or 'negative' magnets, other than in the minds of magnetic therapists who seem to have very little scientific knowledge of magnetism! Magnetic poles, not magnets, are named after the directions in which the point when freely suspended -i.e. north and south.
No, a magnet cannot pull through paper because paper is not a magnetic material and does not attract to magnets. Magnets can only attract materials that contain iron, nickel, or cobalt.
Yes, it does due to Nickel content
There are magnets in magnets that magnetically attract metal...
what will not attract to a magnet
Yes, magnets attract iron and other materials such as nickel and cobalt.
No.
No. Magnets do not attract gold, silver, aluminum, brass, copper or lead. Magnets will attract nickel and iron or steel.
Usually magnets attract any iron based metals. Magnets usually only attract or repel other magnets
No they attract to other magnets.
Magnets can attract to almost anything that contains these 4 things. Steel, Iron, Cobalt, and Nickel.
Magnets are able to attract magnetic objects.
magnets have negative and positive charges
no carbon steel not attract to magnets