at the atomic level because of the movement of electrons
Any old piece of metal can be a temporary magnet; it can be made to act as a magnet for a while, then revert back to being just metal without any magnetic properties.
The magnet in a compass is free to move, and will adjust to any external magnetic field.The magnet in a compass is free to move, and will adjust to any external magnetic field.The magnet in a compass is free to move, and will adjust to any external magnetic field.The magnet in a compass is free to move, and will adjust to any external magnetic field.
They don't have any properties!
Yes; any current produces a magnetic field, an AC current will produce an alternating magnetic field. If the current (and therefore the magnetic field) changes quickly, you may not be able to detect it with a compass needle, for example.
Any kind of metal is magnetic.
No, radon is not magnetic. It is a radioactive gas and does not possess any magnetic properties.
Yes. Hydrogen has magnetic properties.
Not any element is a magnet; but in a large sense any material has magnetic (including anti-) properties.
Yes, if the substance has magnetic properties.
No it can't because it doesn't have any magnetic properties
Anytime electricity flows it creates a magnetic field
Azurite is one of the two copper carbonate minerals found in nature (the other is malachite). It is found in a hydrated form. It would be remarkable if it possessed any magnetic properties, lacking as it does any of the ferro atoms.
Cotton is cellulose, which does not have any magnetic properties. As well, it is grown in sub-tropical geographies, not in the polar regions.
Austenite is not magnetic. It's an allotrope of iron, and has some alloying agents, but it only exists at high temperatures that are well above the Curie point of whatever iron alloy is heated. We know that metals that are magnetic will lose their magnetic properties above a certain temperature (called the Curie point), which varies for different metals and alloys. It is not possible for iron alloys (or any steels) to make the transition to austenite until well past the Curie point of the metal. Any magnetic properties the metal had will have long ago disappeared.
No. Orange juice contains no magnetic material; it would perhaps lower the strength of a field, being a medium with lower permittivity, but not by any significant amount.
Even free space (in olden days named as vacuum) has magnetic and electric properties.
Any old piece of metal can be a temporary magnet; it can be made to act as a magnet for a while, then revert back to being just metal without any magnetic properties.