no, the type of metal used is platinum which is unfavorable to metal or magnet.
Metal materials containing iron, nickel, or cobalt will stick to a magnet due to their magnetic properties. Other metals like aluminum, copper, and gold are not magnetic and will not stick to a magnet.
If the case is a typical Ambrotype case, and the image is a true Ambrotype, no, a magnet will not stick, since there is no metal in either. The Ambrotype is on glass, the case is made of wood and leather or cloth, or of thermoplastic and the metal frame that surrounds the image is made of non-magnetic brass. A tintype, on the other hand, is made from sheet iron, and a magnet will stick, though it would take a fairly powerful magnet to stick through a layer of wood or plastic between. A magnet will stick directly to the back of a tintype plate, however. To cover all the bases, neither will a magnet stick to a Daguerreotype, since the Daguerreotype plate is silver on copper, neither of which is magnetic.
Short answer: no. Long answer: it depends.
The magnet sticks to the refrigerator because the metal surface of the refrigerator is ferromagnetic, meaning it can be magnetized. When the magnet comes into contact with the metal, the magnetic domains within the metal align with the magnetic field of the magnet, creating an attraction that causes the magnet to stick.
Silver and copper are not magnetic materials so no American 90% silver coin will stick to a magnet.
Amagnate can stick to certain plates, If there is a plate in your body that magnates can stick to then it has to determine where in the body the plate is. If its near the skin then probably yes, but if its deeper in your body the magnate may not stick
the magnet it could stick together becaus esomehow the metal attracts the magnet and it makes pulls the metal material and stick to it
Metal materials containing iron, nickel, or cobalt will stick to a magnet due to their magnetic properties. Other metals like aluminum, copper, and gold are not magnetic and will not stick to a magnet.
Probably not. You need a ferromagnetic material for a magnet to stick. There are basically three elements that are ferromagnetic: Cobalt [Co]; Nickel [Ni]; & Iron [Fe] (and some esoteric ones too). If the metal alloy that has been plated with silver to make the "silver plate" has enough of these then a magnet will stick, of these, only Nickel is commonly a component of alloys that are plated but often not in concentrations that are sufficient to make it obviously magnetic.
You can not plate silver with iron, so no. (you can cover silver inside iron, but that would be just ridiculous, unless you want to hide the silver) But if you plate iron with silver, then you can lift the silvery object with magnet. (because the magnet sticks to the iron) But silver, whatever state it is in (wire, plate, necklace) does not stick to a magnet.
If the case is a typical Ambrotype case, and the image is a true Ambrotype, no, a magnet will not stick, since there is no metal in either. The Ambrotype is on glass, the case is made of wood and leather or cloth, or of thermoplastic and the metal frame that surrounds the image is made of non-magnetic brass. A tintype, on the other hand, is made from sheet iron, and a magnet will stick, though it would take a fairly powerful magnet to stick through a layer of wood or plastic between. A magnet will stick directly to the back of a tintype plate, however. To cover all the bases, neither will a magnet stick to a Daguerreotype, since the Daguerreotype plate is silver on copper, neither of which is magnetic.
when a magnet does'nt stick to another magnet it is called non-metal
The refrigerator isn't actually a magnet, it it simply made of metal which magnets can then stick to.
Short answer: no. Long answer: it depends.
The magnet sticks to the refrigerator because the metal surface of the refrigerator is ferromagnetic, meaning it can be magnetized. When the magnet comes into contact with the metal, the magnetic domains within the metal align with the magnetic field of the magnet, creating an attraction that causes the magnet to stick.
Silver and copper are not magnetic materials so no American 90% silver coin will stick to a magnet.
No, sterling silver is not magnetic, so a magnet will not stick to it. If a magnet does stick to an item labeled as sterling silver, it may indicate the presence of other materials or impurities in the metal.