Since I saw the pictures of vaccines attracting spoons, coins and other metallic objects I've been wondering, assuming that these are real pictures, how could it work?
These pictures suggest that the injection spot and its vicinity became somehow magnetized. One possibility is the injection of micrometric or smaller magnets. The simplest solution would be the injection of permanent magnets, but could explain the observed magnetic effects?
Nowadays, the
strongest commercial permanent magnets are neodymum magnet. You can buy a 0.5 Tesla (Tesla being a unit measuring the intensity of the magnetic field) magnet which develops about 500 kg (1,200 lb) of pulling power. But it weighs 4 kg (9 lb). In a nutshell, neodymium pulling force is about 100 times its weight.
The
volume of one dose of Pfizer vaccine is 0.3 ml (0.3 g) of which at least 80%, I assume, is composed of
lipid nanospheres. It leaves 0.06 grams for active substances. If all the active substances were neodymium powder, it would generate about 6 grams of pulling force.
For reference the weight of a teaspoon is about
20 grams.