Many plastic objects attract dust and hairs because they have a big amount of static.
In this case, if a duster is dirty from other cleanings, then the dust would possibly attract onto it.
Hope this helped!
Objects that are less dense than oil will float in oil. Examples include feathers, certain types of wood, and plastic objects like Styrofoam or plastic wrap. Metal objects and dense materials will sink in oil.
Brittle objects typically do not undergo plastic deformation due to their inability to sustain significant deformation before fracturing. Instead, brittle materials tend to fracture with minimal or no plastic deformation.
Objects that are denser than water will sink, such as rocks, metal objects, and certain types of wood. Objects that are less dense than water will float, such as plastic bottles, rubber ducks, and foam.
Yes, static electricity can attract plastic. Like other materials, plastic can become charged with static electricity through frictional contact with other objects, leading to attraction or repulsion between the charged plastic and other charged objects. This is commonly observed when items like plastic bags or containers stick to each other or to surfaces due to static electricity.
Objects that are denser than water will sink in water. This includes materials like metal, glass, and some types of plastic.
plastic that is covered
Plastic objects can shoot if they are designed for it, such as toy guns or water pistols. These objects use mechanisms like springs or air pressure to propel objects, like darts or water, out of the plastic device.
Plastic being nonconducting, it avoids electrocution when covered around electric wire.
Generally it is not. If plastic surgery is required to do something to help aid a ailment then it might be covered. However, for cosmetic purposes, Plastic Surgery is not covered by your insurance.
A fridge or something that you can see is plastic coated or fully plastic
most baseballs are covered with leather. some of them are covered with plastic and rubber. these are the bad ones
paper, plastic material, bottles (glas/plastic) and metallic objects
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Objects that are less dense than oil will float in oil. Examples include feathers, certain types of wood, and plastic objects like Styrofoam or plastic wrap. Metal objects and dense materials will sink in oil.
by recycling it and taking it to a factory
"insulators"
There are a variety of wire coverings depending on what the conductor is used for. There are also different wire coverings for different temperatures where the conductor will be used. To answer the question the wires in a circuit are covered in insulation.