No magnets only stick to iron. (Magnets will also stick to nickel)
yes tin is metal.
tin is a low-melting, malleable, ductile metallic element nearly approaching silver in color and luster: used in plating and in making alloys, tinfoil, and soft solders. Symbol: Sn; atomic weight: 118.69; atomic number: 50; specific gravity: 7.31 at 20°C.
Yes it will.
Not to pure tin. Magnets stick to things with iron in them.
Tin is a metallic mineral.
Tin is a metallic mineral.
This can happen through a metallic bond of two metallic elements. Metallic bonding is the electromagnetic interaction between delocalized electrons, called conduction electrons, and the metallic nuclei within metals. When seen as the sharing of 'free' electrons among a lattice of positively-charged metal ions, metallic bonding may be compared to that within molten salts, but this simplistic view holds for very few metals. In a more quantum mechanical view the conduction electrons divide their density equally over all atoms that function as neutral (non-charged) entities. Metallic bonding accounts for many physical characteristics of metals, such as strength, malleability, ductility, conduction of heat, and electricity, opacity and lustre.
Rub the metallic surface with a magnet.
Tin IS a metalalic mineral
a mineral magnet can stick to a magnet because a mineral magnet has to poles the north and the south poles
Magnets stick to a magnet or things that has iron in it
Yes it is.
Sn (tin), which is a metal, is more metallic than Sb (antimony), which is a metalloid.
yes,it can