Oh, dude, totally! Magnets can totally attract metal in water because water doesn't really affect the magnetic force. It's like the metal in water is all, "Hey, magnet, I'm coming your way!" and the magnet's all, "Cool, come on over, metal buddy!" So, yeah, magnets can totally pull metal out of water like it's no big deal.
No, water cannot be magnetized. It is not magnetic in the sense that we can use a magnet to attract it.
Non-magnetic metals such as copper, aluminum, and lead do not typically attract to magnets. These metals do not have magnetic properties like iron, nickel, and cobalt, which are attracted to magnets.
no. They only attract to Nickel, Cobalt, Iron, and certain alloys.
what will not attract to a magnet
The hypothesis of magnets is that they contain invisible forces that attract or repel certain metals based on their polarity. This hypothesis explains the observed behavior of magnets interacting with each other and with magnetic materials.
There are magnets in magnets that magnetically attract metal...
Because silly, paper is not a metal. Magnets only attract to metal objects, not wood, or sand, or a finger, but only metal.
Yes
magnets only attract iron and steel
if different magnets attract metals then the attraction will be different.
duhhhh......any that are METAL!!!
because magnets attracts any object that is metallic or has metal in them
magnets dont lose their magnetism under water. According to me magnets do attract paper under water.
No, water cannot be magnetized. It is not magnetic in the sense that we can use a magnet to attract it.
Any kind of metal. ------------------------------ Magnets attract ferromagnetic metals, mainly iron and nickel, and their alloys. ------------------------------
Non-magnetic metals such as copper, aluminum, and lead do not typically attract to magnets. These metals do not have magnetic properties like iron, nickel, and cobalt, which are attracted to magnets.
they aren't made out of real metal.