Lead is made of brass it looks metal but it is brass,magnets do not attract to brass
Actually lead is made of lead it gets it's own square on the Periodic Table.
brass is made of copper and zinc.
Magnets stick to ferromagnetic materials such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. They can also stick to other magnets.
The three pure metals that do not stick to magnets are aluminum, copper, and gold. This is because their atomic structure does not allow the alignment of magnetic domains necessary for magnetism to occur.
Iron (Fe), Nickel (Ni), Cobalt (Co) and some alloys are the only metals that respond to magnetism.
Chalkboards are not magnetic themselves. However, some chalkboards have a steel backing, which makes them magnetic because magnets are attracted to the steel surface. This allows magnetic objects, like magnets and magnetic letters, to stick to the chalkboard.
No. Magnets do not attract gold, silver, aluminum, brass, copper or lead. Magnets will attract nickel and iron or steel.
they stick together cause of magnetism dah if you dont know then now you do
They stick to other magnets or iron, cobalt and nickel.
I dont think you can ---- If you super-heat the magnets, it will demagnetize them, thus stopping the "pulling power" of the magnets. Basically stick the magnets in a vat of super boiling water, that should be sufficient enough heat to demagnetize the magnets.
Magnets stick to materials that are attracted to them, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt.
Magnets stick to materials that are ferromagnetic, such as iron, nickel, and cobalt. They can also stick to certain alloys and other magnets. Materials like wood, plastic, and glass are not generally attracted to magnets.
Not to pure tin. Magnets stick to things with iron in them.
No, gold is not magnetic and will not stick to magnets. Gold is a non-ferrous metal, meaning it is not attracted to magnets.
Lead is used in magnets.
Yes, paper clips are typically made of steel which is magnetic, so they can stick to magnets.
no
no
it does