I think No.
Magnet does not stick to the opposite of the magnet because one side of the magnet is called south pole and another side is called north pole .And south pole is suppose to stick north to north and south to South
A magnet would only be useful if some component(s) of the mixture were ferromagnetic (e.g. iron, nickel, cobalt, magnetite), in which case such component(s) would stick to the magnet and the remainder would be left behind.
Yes, a magnet will stick to steel wool, including Brillo pads, because they are made from steel, which is a ferromagnetic material. When exposed to a magnetic field, the iron in the steel wool is attracted to the magnet, allowing it to stick.
A steel nail and a magnet can stick together because steel is a ferromagnetic material. This means that it can be magnetized and will be attracted to a magnet. When a magnet is brought close to a steel nail, the magnetic field can cause the nail to become magnetized, leading to attraction. However, if the nail is not magnetized or if the magnet is too weak, they may not stick together.
You could do this using a magnet, Iron filings are attracted to a magnet, aluminium filings are not.Hint: magnetism, investigate the relative magnetic properties of the metals.Iron is a ferrous material, and aluminum is non-ferrous. A magnet would separate the two materials as the iron would be attracted to the magnet while the aluminum filings would not. The term ferrous basically refers to any material which contains iron.
The iron nail would stick to a magnet. Copper is not attracted to magnets.
The only jewelry that would stick to a magnet would be anything with iron in it. Gold, silver, and platinum will not stick to magnets, either.
Magnet sticks to another magnet when north pole of the first magnet approaches the south pole of the second magnet.
when a magnet does'nt stick to another magnet it is called non-metal
It is not. Otherwise, we would stick to a magnet (human body contains carbon)
a mineral magnet can stick to a magnet because a mineral magnet has to poles the north and the south poles
Stick it to a magnet for a few minutes.
Magnet does not stick to the opposite of the magnet because one side of the magnet is called south pole and another side is called north pole .And south pole is suppose to stick north to north and south to South
A magnet does not normally stick to silver. However a current of electricity passing through silver wire will produce a magnetic field around the wire. That electric field would have an effect on a magnet, the principle of a solenoid switch. Copper is usually used in such switches as it is cheaper but silver could be used.
No, a magnet will not stick to a window because standard window glass is not magnetic.
No, a magnet does not stick to copper because copper is not a magnetic material.
If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.If the wheels are steel, a magnet will stick. If aluminum, it will not.