Despite aluminum being the most abundant metal on Earth, it does not interact with magnetic materials. The reason is a little complicated , but basically it's because the atoms, specifically the electrons, in solid aluminum are too far apart from each other to induce cohesive allignment of their magnetic dipoles. Hence the overall magnetic effects of the electron average out to zero, even in the presence of common magnets.
No. It's not magnetic. Only iron, nickel, cobalt and some alloys made using them are magnetic.
Aluminum is not generally considered a magnetic metal. Only very powerful neodymium magnets create any magnetic effect in aluminum. Some magnetic metals include iron, nickel, and cobalt.
No
NO. Aluminum and oxygen are paramagnetic and do not show magnetic behavior under normal conditions.
Always did for me, are you sure you haven't confused aluminum for steel?
Any type of metal basically. No, only FERROUS metals. Aluminum, Copper, Brass, etc won't stick to a magnet.
They stick to other magnets or iron, cobalt and nickel.
No.
They stick to aluminum cans
yes.......! i guess its yes because aluminum is a metal and all the metals are attracted by magnets so hence aluminum get attracted to metals...!
Because aluminum isn't made of metal
NO. Aluminum and oxygen are paramagnetic and do not show magnetic behavior under normal conditions.
Copper, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc and many more.
Always did for me, are you sure you haven't confused aluminum for steel?
Any type of metal basically. No, only FERROUS metals. Aluminum, Copper, Brass, etc won't stick to a magnet.
No. Aluminum is not magnetic.
They stick to other magnets or iron, cobalt and nickel.
No. Only to iron and other ferromagnetic materials. Or if you form the aluminum into a coil and pass a current through it, then you have an electromagnet, which would be attracted to a magnet.
Magnets will stick to iron paper clips, but not to plastic ones.
no