Yes: Being flattening by hammering is a property called "malleability", and copper is one of the highly malleable metals.
Yes it can and often is in manufacturing.
Yes, because copper is very malleable.
It is a physical change because you are changing the shape of the metal.
No such animal. That would be like hammering an orange into an apple.... They are both different pure elements. Unless you're handy with the nuclear fission or fusion, you cant make one from the other. No chemical or physical changes can alter that.
The technical term for being able to be shaped with a hammer is "malleable." Metal elements are all malleable, so you can name any three of them. (gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, brass, bronze, etc.)
anneal <><><> Annealing (heating and allowing to slowly cool) softens metals. Copper may be "work hardened" by squeezing it, hammering it, shot blasting it. A limited amount of hardening may be obtained by heat treating it- heating, followed by rapid cooling, usually by quenching in liquid.
Example: hammering and electroplating.
It would depend on how enthusiastically you flattened it. Like a jeweller hammering out gold leaf, you could probably make it about a quarter the size of a tennis court if you had sufficient patience and skill.
copper
It is a physical change because you are changing the shape of the metal.
Hammered copper can be used in many decorative or useful items. The effect of hammering the copper is to make a dented effect all over the copper. This can catch the light and make an attractive surface.
A hatchet copper? The only thing that comes to mind is a clip that is used to hold copper pipe up. It is driven into wood and has a curved section to support the pipe. A copper hatchet or brass hammer is used when you do not want to damage what you are hammering.
No such animal. That would be like hammering an orange into an apple.... They are both different pure elements. Unless you're handy with the nuclear fission or fusion, you cant make one from the other. No chemical or physical changes can alter that.
The Hammering Process was created on 2000-10-26.
Aluminum (Al) and Copper (Cu) are metals, and all metals share the same properties: Malleable (can be flattened or shaped) Heat and Electric conductivity Luster (shine) and Density (higher than non-metals) Aluminum (Al) and Copper (Cu) are metals, and all metals share the same properties: Malleable (can be flattened or shaped) Heat and Electric conductivity Luster (shine) and Density (higher than non-metals)
The technical term for being able to be shaped with a hammer is "malleable." Metal elements are all malleable, so you can name any three of them. (gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, brass, bronze, etc.)
Physical one.
anneal <><><> Annealing (heating and allowing to slowly cool) softens metals. Copper may be "work hardened" by squeezing it, hammering it, shot blasting it. A limited amount of hardening may be obtained by heat treating it- heating, followed by rapid cooling, usually by quenching in liquid.
its an flattened sphere