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taskers
Jan 17, 2008, 06:01 PM
What is a magnet attracted to?

taskers
Jan 17, 2008, 06:04 PM
What does Magnet stick to?

ISneezeFunny
Jan 17, 2008, 06:05 PM
Metal... mostly. Some other objects as well... but mostly metal, iron.

... oh yeah. Me, as well... as all things are attracted to me.

... yeah I'm done.

KISS
Jan 17, 2008, 06:16 PM
Iron, but they don't stick to most stainless steels. There is magnetic stainless which magnets will stick to and it rusts easily. Magnets stick to other magnets at opposite poles.

biggsie
Jan 17, 2008, 06:26 PM
Magnets stick to ferrous metals -- common name iron or steel

They do not stick to copper, brass, aluminum or stainless steel

Capuchin
Jan 19, 2008, 12:06 PM
A ferromagnet (the type that I assume you are talking about, as it is most common) will stick to ferromagnetic materials (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferromagnetism) that are below their Curie Temperature. This can include alloys of these materials too, depending on how they are manufactured.

Meteormagnet
Feb 13, 2008, 12:20 PM
If the field strength of the magnet is increased considerably (say, by supercooling) to the equivalent of many times the earth's field (I do not remember the numbers offhand) it can generate a localized field that will attract/repel nearly anything. There was a neat demonstration of a small (presumably non-ferrous!) frog being completely suspended.

Capuchin
Feb 13, 2008, 01:50 PM
If the field strength of the magnet is increased considerably (say, by supercooling) to the equivalent of many times the earth's field (I do not remember the numbers offhand) it can generate a localized field that will attract/repel nearly anything. There was a neat demonstration of a small (presumably non-ferrous!) frog being completely suspended.

The frog levitation video you were talking about was performed by a professor of mine at the university of Bristol, Sir Michael Berry, and he won the IgNobel prize for the research. Nearly all materials exhibit some form of magnetism called diamagnetism. They are of course not magnetic in every day situations, but if you apply a strong enough magnetic field they will become magnetic and this is what the frog exhibits. The research was of course made possible by the creation of a remarkably strong magnetic field of several Tesla.

As we humans are mostly water like the frog, it should be possible to levitate a human, but such strong magnetic fields have not been created in an area large enough to accommodate a human.. yet. :)

He's a top bloke and it's great to be studying in a department with many physicists of his caliber.

More info (and more levitating objects by the same technique) here:
HFML, Levitation (http://www.hfml.science.ru.nl/froglev.html)

Stratmando
Feb 21, 2008, 04:14 PM
Anyone hear of a Gold Magnet? I saw a circuit years ago, I believe it was maybe high frequency static? This was for Flakes, not Gold bars.

Capuchin
Feb 21, 2008, 05:02 PM
Anyone hear of a Gold Magnet?, I saw a circuit years ago, I believe it was maybe high frequency static? This was for Flakes, not Gold bars.

It was likely to be taking advantage of diamagnetism. I'm not sure of the magnetic properties of Gold, Were they attracted to the magnet or repelled?

Stratmando
Feb 21, 2008, 06:13 PM
"Were they attracted to the Mannet or repelled?"

Gold is attracted to it. "Frothing" is interesting in the fact that gold flakes will adhear to bubbles. I learned this by adding Carbonated Soda to GoldenSlagen(Cinnamon Liquer(I think), It had Gold Flakes in it, When Mixed, the Gold Flakes would rise to the top, put your finger under the floating gold flake, it will then fall inside to your fingerprint. Strange what you can do with something heavy?

Capuchin
Feb 22, 2008, 01:06 AM
Sounds like gold is paramagnetic then, if it was really magnetism and not some other kind of attraction.