magnets dont lose their magnetism under water. According to me magnets do attract paper under water.
The description of magnetism is the force of repeling or attracting which is used in everyday life.Magnetism is the property of an element to attract objects of certain magnetic property towards itself. These certain magnetic substance are classified under these 3 categories:-DiamagnetismParamagnetismFerromagnetism
No. Trees, often being much taller than surrounding structures, will attract lightning strikes. and the tree can get on fire
a mixture of iron filings and sandif we have a mixture of sand salt and iron first the iron well be separated with the magnet then the remaining mixture will be put in water where the sand will goes to the bottom. at last the water will be evaporated and the salt remains
Not only magnets, but metal repel. There are two kinds of charges that metal contain, positive and negative. If you push a positively-charged magnet towards another positively-charged magnet, they'll repel, maybe because one type of charge needs the other to attract. If this one type of charge comes close to another charge of the same kind, it won't receive what it needs, and feel "resent" to the other charge, then repel. If you push a negatively-charged magnet towards another negatively-charged magnet, they will also repel.
An under-the-surface question starts with should,would, or could.
It would be more accurate to say that magnets attract iron (but under the Newtonian principle that for every action there is an equal but opposite reaction, if magnets attract iron, then iron attracts magnets, so yes).
because magnets cannot attract under water
The description of magnetism is the force of repeling or attracting which is used in everyday life.Magnetism is the property of an element to attract objects of certain magnetic property towards itself. These certain magnetic substance are classified under these 3 categories:-DiamagnetismParamagnetismFerromagnetism
This is called magnetism. metals in the pen attract the negative and positive charges in the magnets.
Look under coach.
water!
What you can do is under your wind turbine (the object that spins with the wind's force), you would put powerful magnets. Under that on the base, you could put coils of wire connected to a light, for instance. The magnets would spin over the coils, making the magnet's magnetic force run through the coils to the light creating electricity.
Yes, magnetism happens even under water.
The mineral Magnetite is a natural magnet. It is ferrousoferric oxide withformula Fe3O4.
It's possible. Magnets usually have a good deal of iron in them, particularly the older ones. Iron can rust or otherwise be attacked, depending on the conditions under which it is stored. Magnets are generally suseptible to corrosion.
You have to find the code in the computer, but to do that, you have to get the disc along with the paperclip under the sofa
Because it is not developed and it does not attract those who want to migrate.