helium and carbon are non metals.
Gold is a metal
Some are solids like carbon, phosphorus, sulphur etc Some are gases like helium, neon, argon etc. Bromine is the only liquid non metal
Sodium and lithium are in the group 1; gold is in the group 11.
Far from it. Aluminum has 3 valence electrons. The highest number is 8, which the noble gases other than helium have (helium has only 2). Metals can have 1, 2, or 3 valence electrons, so aluminum has the greatest number that an element can have if it is a metal. Once you get to 4 valence electrons (which the element carbon has) you are in the nonmetal range.
Copper and gold; copper is brown when in a pure state (green is more familiar, but that's actually an oxidized copper), and gold is yellow.
No. Carbon dating only works for things that were once alive. For that matter, gold rings contain effectively no carbon anyway.
Among iron, gold, carbon, and silver, the odd member is carbon, the only non-metal of the group. On the periodic table, the three metals are all in the central "transitional metals" area, but carbon is on the right side among the non-metals.
There is only one non-metal in the carbon family which is carbon.
There are no metals in the first period. Only hydrogen and helium.
It is supposed to have properties that of non metals only, but since it has completely filled orbitals, helium is chemically inert
Some are solids like carbon, phosphorus, sulphur etc Some are gases like helium, neon, argon etc. Bromine is the only liquid non metal
Gold (Au) is an element, and is only made of itself.
copper, gold
The Answer Is No there are more yellow metals
Carbon is the only non-metal in carbon family. The other elements are either metalloids or metals.
Sodium and lithium are in the group 1; gold is in the group 11.
The only two metals from the periodic table that are colored are Gold (Au) and Copper(Cu)
No, gold is just Malleable. Metals as a rule aren't sticky, only if a substance was added to it.