Iron, Cobalt, Nickel, and Gadolinium.
Thallium is a non magnetic metal.
yes because it is metal and metal has a magnetic force
Copper
Silver U.S. coins are made entirely of silver and copper -- neither of which is a magnetic metal. Base metal coins that are magnetic, likely contain some amount of iron -- a magnetic metal, or a high concentration of nickel which is also attracted to a magnet.
It depends on the type of metal it is made from.
Iron, Cobalt and Nickel (Steel is also magnetic, but it is made up of mostly Iron so this is not a main magnetic metal)
the main metal is iron and yes it is magnetic
Gold is not magnetic.
Thallium is a non magnetic metal.
Metallic or non-metallic elements can be magnetic.
Silver is a not magnetic metal - the most highly magnetic metal is iron - so no unless the cores of the coins are iron
yes because it is metal and metal has a magnetic force
Only if 1) the metal is magnetic (Iron, Nickel, Cobalt or magnetic alloys) or 2) the metal is carrying current
Radium is a non-magnetic metal.
Not necessarily; tin is not magnetic, for example.
Yes. It is the only non-metal that is magnetic
Metal