Interesting! It’s not the same thing as what happens when a magnet is attracted to a ferrous metal, though. As they explain in the comments, the magnet falling through the pipe creates a current in the copper, making it an electromagnet. That should work with any metal, also gold; but it identifies a metal only as a metal, you wouldn’t be able to tell which one (maybe if you made sufficiently precise measurements you could tell by the strength of the magnetic field, but we’re talking about someone wearing a magnetic ring, not about lab setups). You couldn’t use it to tell if some ore contained gold.
But now I’m wondering what would happen if you drop a piece of non-ferrous metal through a magnetic pipe… A ring is a very short pipe though; to see any effects you’d probably have to film it and play it in slow motion, so it wouldn’t be very useful for prospecting either.
This is the basis for metal detectors, anyway. Golden pieces should have been detectable (and movable) by magnets, provided there is magnetic field, strong enough.
Some calculations just how strong and what the whole structure should have been—are necessary. But it should have been possible to make some magnetic gadget for gold “panning”.
Gold occurs principally as a native metal, usually alloyed to a greater or lesser extent with silver (as electrum), or sometimes with mercury (as an amalgam). Native gold can occur as sizeable nuggets, as fine grains or flakes in alluvial deposits, or as grains or microscopic particles embedded in other rocks.
To form eddy currents you need enough metal in which to form them. If you have ever seen the experiment with the pipe above—vs the same with a slit in the pipe to lower the number of currents that can form—there is a considerable loss of currents forming.
Compared to natural ores—to be able to produce currents that can be felt is going to be difficult.
I have a few iron ore rocks that midly stick the the rings. but they barely support their own mass against gravity.
Gold comes mostly in elementary gold particles, nuggets. That’s why it’s probably possible to fish it this way. (Perhaps a few people do just that and don’t talk too much about it from obvious reasons.)
Play with some (pure) golden items. Is there a way to sense them? Is there a way to influence them even?
Perhaps some prospectors will be interested in your findings.
I have been near golden items. Nothing exciting happens. unfortunately.
Nope, that doesn’t work. Only metals that have iron in them are attracted to magnets.
Not exactly.
Interesting! It’s not the same thing as what happens when a magnet is attracted to a ferrous metal, though. As they explain in the comments, the magnet falling through the pipe creates a current in the copper, making it an electromagnet. That should work with any metal, also gold; but it identifies a metal only as a metal, you wouldn’t be able to tell which one (maybe if you made sufficiently precise measurements you could tell by the strength of the magnetic field, but we’re talking about someone wearing a magnetic ring, not about lab setups). You couldn’t use it to tell if some ore contained gold.
But now I’m wondering what would happen if you drop a piece of non-ferrous metal through a magnetic pipe… A ring is a very short pipe though; to see any effects you’d probably have to film it and play it in slow motion, so it wouldn’t be very useful for prospecting either.
This is the basis for metal detectors, anyway. Golden pieces should have been detectable (and movable) by magnets, provided there is magnetic field, strong enough.
Some calculations just how strong and what the whole structure should have been—are necessary. But it should have been possible to make some magnetic gadget for gold “panning”.
Provided that gold is the only metal in your ore. That is usually not the case.
You are wrong here. Wikipedia has this to say:
See.
To form eddy currents you need enough metal in which to form them. If you have ever seen the experiment with the pipe above—vs the same with a slit in the pipe to lower the number of currents that can form—there is a considerable loss of currents forming.
Compared to natural ores—to be able to produce currents that can be felt is going to be difficult.
I have a few iron ore rocks that midly stick the the rings. but they barely support their own mass against gravity.
Gold comes mostly in elementary gold particles, nuggets. That’s why it’s probably possible to fish it this way. (Perhaps a few people do just that and don’t talk too much about it from obvious reasons.)
Its possible. Seems like too much effort to get anything of worth.