No, only ferrous metals are magnetic.
The force exerted by a magnet on a metal object is known as magnetic force, which arises from the interaction of the magnet's magnetic field with the magnetic properties of the metal. This force can attract or repel the object, depending on the nature of the metal and the orientation of the magnetic field. The strength of the magnetic force depends on factors such as the distance between the magnet and the object, the strength of the magnet, and the magnetic properties of the material being attracted.
Silver is a not magnetic metal - the most highly magnetic metal is iron - so no unless the cores of the coins are iron
Iron is a chemical element that is a metal and is found in many everyday objects. A magnet is an object that produces a magnetic field and can attract iron and other materials with magnetic properties. So, while iron is a material, a magnet is a tool that uses magnetic properties to attract certain materials.
To magnetize a metal object like a nail, you can stroke it with a magnet in one direction, aligning its magnetic domains. When the nail is subjected to the magnet's field, the domains, which are normally randomly oriented, become aligned in the same direction. This alignment causes the nail to exhibit magnetic properties, allowing it to attract other ferromagnetic materials. Once removed from the magnet, the nail may retain some magnetism, depending on the metal's properties.
The strongest magnetic area of a bar magnet is the sides.
That depends how strong the magnet is. But a normal refrigerator magnet needs to be around 1 cm and less to attract a metal object. Have a nice day!
See whether that object can attract nickel,steel,and metal.
The force exerted by a magnet on a metal object is known as magnetic force, which arises from the interaction of the magnet's magnetic field with the magnetic properties of the metal. This force can attract or repel the object, depending on the nature of the metal and the orientation of the magnetic field. The strength of the magnetic force depends on factors such as the distance between the magnet and the object, the strength of the magnet, and the magnetic properties of the material being attracted.
Metal?
Metal?
When you rub a magnet with metal, the metal object becomes temporarily magnetized. This happens because the atoms in the metal align with the magnetic field of the magnet. However, once the magnet is removed, the metal object loses its magnetism.
The exact same way that a normal magnet attracts metal.
copper
Yes.
There are magnets in magnets that magnetically attract metal...
magnets only attract iron and steel
No, gold is not magnetic and does not attract magnets. It is a non-magnetic metal, which means it does not have magnetic properties.