No. Magnets can pull other magnets towards them, or push them away from them. If a magnet's north pole points towards another magnets north pole (or a south pole towards a south pole), they will repel, instead of pulling them towards them. On the other hand, if a magnet is brought near a piece of iron that is not already magnetic, it will induce magnetism in the iron, in such a way that the two magnets will attract one another. Yet on the other hand, magnets have hardly any influence on most substances.
No, magnets can attract to a variety of materials based on their magnetic properties, not just shiny objects. Magnets attract objects that contain ferromagnetic materials like iron, cobalt, and nickel, regardless of their appearance.
Charged objects and magnets both produce electromagnetic forces. A charged object generates an electric field that can attract or repel other charged objects, while a magnet produces a magnetic field that can attract or repel other magnets or magnetic materials. Both can exert forces on nearby objects without physical contact.
Magnets can attract objects through paper or plastics because these materials are not magnetic themselves, and thus do not interfere with the magnetic field. The magnetic field lines can still pass through these non-magnetic materials to attract objects on the other side.
Electro magnets can be used to attract metals temperarily while permanent magnet would be used for compasses.
no. They only attract to Nickel, Cobalt, Iron, and certain alloys.
Bigger magnets are used for heavier objects.
Magnets are able to attract magnetic objects.
No, magnets can attract to a variety of materials based on their magnetic properties, not just shiny objects. Magnets attract objects that contain ferromagnetic materials like iron, cobalt, and nickel, regardless of their appearance.
Stainless steel woodplastivs
Magnets can attract objects by pulling them towards each other, and repel objects by pushing them away. This is due to the magnetic field produced by the magnet interacting with the magnetic properties of the objects.
No, magnets are not heavier than the objects they attract. The attraction between a magnet and an object is not due to weight but rather to magnetic forces.
Magnets attract objects made of iron, nickel, and cobalt in a science project.
Magnets attract specific types of metals such as: Iron Nickel Cobalt Steel Try this: Get a magnet hover it over different objects, see what it attracts and repels (doesn't attract).
Because silly, paper is not a metal. Magnets only attract to metal objects, not wood, or sand, or a finger, but only metal.
they aren't made out of real metal.
Magnets do not attract certain objects because these objects do not contain magnetic properties or have free-flowing electrons that can align with the magnetic field. For example, non-magnetic materials like plastic, wood, or glass do not have magnetic properties and therefore are not affected by magnetic fields.
A magnet has a magnetic field around it. The magnetic field causes a magnetic force that can attract objects to the magnet.