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The answer is: Yes, it does.

And the reason is this: In a magnet the electrons in the atoms are spinning in the same direction, which gives a magnet its magnetic domain-north or south-and creates a magnetic field.

If the electrons are spinning every which way, the domains are scattered and the magnet is not magnetized.

Dropping, hitting, or heating a magnet will disturb the magnetic field-the spin of the electrons goes out of alignment and becomes random. (If you heat the magnet, the electrons start moving more quickly and can vibrate out of alignment with the domain.) The answer is: Yes, it does.

And the reason is this: In a magnet the electrons in the atoms are spinning in the same direction, which gives a magnet its magnetic domain-north or south-and creates a magnetic field.

If the electrons are spinning every which way, the domains are scattered and the magnet is not magnetized.

Dropping, hitting, or heating a magnet will disturb the magnetic field-the spin of the electrons goes out of alignment and becomes random. (If you heat the magnet, the electrons start moving more quickly and can vibrate out of alignment with the domain.)

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Why does a magnet lose its' magnetism by hammering and heating?

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