Yes, every material has its limit in this respect.
The strong magnetised nail will pick up more paper clips than the weak magnetised nail.That is because the strong magnetised nail is getting more strength and that means that the weak magnetised nail is getting less strength.in a steel nail there are these things called domains, in a weakly magnetised nail some of them will be pointing north, south, east and west, but however in a strongly magnetised nail all the domains will point to north.
An iron nail is more strongly attracted to a magnet because the iron nail itself is made of ferromagnetic material, which can become magnetized in the presence of a magnetic field. This causes the iron nail to be attracted to the magnet.
Yes, iron is a magnetic material, so an iron nail can be easily magnetized. When exposed to a magnetic field, iron atoms align in such a way that they create a magnetic field, making the iron nail act as a magnet.
Typically you can magnetize iron or steel by exposing it to a strong magnetic field. Common "ceramic" magnets may not be strong enough, but you may need a strong rare earth magnet or a strong electro magnet.
To magnetize an iron nail permanently, you would need to stroke the nail along a magnet multiple times in the same direction. This process aligns the domains in the iron, creating a magnetic field along the nail. A diagram would show the iron nail being stroked along the magnet in one consistent direction to align the domains.
The strong magnetised nail will pick up more paper clips than the weak magnetised nail.That is because the strong magnetised nail is getting more strength and that means that the weak magnetised nail is getting less strength.in a steel nail there are these things called domains, in a weakly magnetised nail some of them will be pointing north, south, east and west, but however in a strongly magnetised nail all the domains will point to north.
A Weakly magnetised nail will pick up less paper clips then a highly magnetised nail, Hope That Helps:)
what is the diffrence between a magnetised nail and a unmagnetised nail
An iron nail is more strongly attracted to a magnet because the iron nail itself is made of ferromagnetic material, which can become magnetized in the presence of a magnetic field. This causes the iron nail to be attracted to the magnet.
Like poles will repel.Unlike poles will attract.
Graphics can't be shown on Answers.com. Take a large iron nail (or several nails, 6 inches long). Wrap several layers of thinly insulated wire round the nail(s), and connect the bared ends of the wire to the positive and negative terminals of a 9 volt battery. As the electrical current is sent through the coiled wire, the iron nail(s) becomes electro-magnetised and will attract metal. Turn the current off, and the metal will drop off, for the nail(s) are no longer magnetised.
In an un-magnetised nail there are tiny domains, each in themselves would be a little magnet, however, in a magnetized steel nail the magnetic "domains" tend to be lined up in the same direction. A domain is a tiny magnet because electrons are spinning with the same orientation. Refer to the related link in the Related Links section below for more details.
The magnetic field would propagate through the material and extend itself for the length of the magnetic material in contact. As long as there is contact there is no pole present. When contact is broken the pole would be the opposite to the pole it was in contact with
what is on the nails is ltlle partials and the banging nocks the particle off
By banging a nail it causes all the tiny domains to face different directions so you end up with a non-magnetised nail.
Iron is a compound iron nail is a iron ore which means that the iron nail is a mixture of metals such as copper and zinc added to make the nail stronger.
Because they have different magnetic properties; iron is strongly ferromagnetic.