Deletedeletedelete Posted March 6, 2008 Posted March 6, 2008 I was wondering...How would gold affect a magnet?Would putting gold underwater cause a great affect in magnets?Tell me in any way you can
Klaynos Posted March 6, 2008 Posted March 6, 2008 Gold is a diamagnetic material.... It'll act in the same way as any other one (weak repulsion)... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamagnetic
Hobbz Posted March 6, 2008 Posted March 6, 2008 Ummm, I think this thread should be moved to physics. I think you would have a much more capable audience to answer this question there.
Mr Skeptic Posted March 7, 2008 Posted March 7, 2008 Gold is diamagnetic, meaning it has an incredibly weak repulsion to magnets (you probably won't notice this). Perhaps a larger effect is that if the magnet were moving, it would induce currents in the gold that would oppose the movement of the magnet, resulting in noticeable drag. Not sure what underwater has to do with anything though. Oh, and nice avatar
Deletedeletedelete Posted March 7, 2008 Author Posted March 7, 2008 Thanks for the avatar comment. I feel that photo suits me right now. Anyway, I am asking this because I have a rather crazy theory, but if I find the answers I'm looking for that theory might get some attention at my local college. So, I ask one more thing...what if a large amount of gold sat underwater for a very long , long time...how would it affect magnets-or, say, a compass?
YT2095 Posted March 7, 2008 Posted March 7, 2008 Gold as a metal is chemically inert for the most part, there`s little in water that will do it any harm beyond a little a surface discoloration over time. as for a Compass, No, it`ll not have any affect on one that you`ll ever notice.
Mr Skeptic Posted March 7, 2008 Posted March 7, 2008 Thanks for the avatar comment. I feel that photo suits me right now. Anyway, I am asking this because I have a rather crazy theory, but if I find the answers I'm looking for that theory might get some attention at my local college. So, I ask one more thing...what if a large amount of gold sat underwater for a very long , long time...how would it affect magnets-or, say, a compass? It would have a negligible effect on a compass. Iron ores, on the other hand, would mess up a compass pretty good if there was enough of it. If it was freshwater you could use a metal detector to find the gold, but if it was in salt water the signal would rapidly decay.
thedarkshade Posted March 7, 2008 Posted March 7, 2008 Gold is a diamagnetic material....Just like any other substance with [math]\mu < \mu_0[/math] !
alan2here Posted March 8, 2008 Posted March 8, 2008 The idea of this energy also comes from Diskworld. It's a great work of fiction but that is all pyramid energy is, fiction. To many people seem to be taking it seriously in this thread.
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