No. The alkali metals in particular have very low densities; the only elements with a lower density than lithium at room temperature are the ones that are gases. Carbon, sulfur, bromine and iodine are all denser than all the alkali metals and several of the alkaline earth metals. Iodine is denser than aluminium and titanium.
Every metal has a density.
Nails are metal.
The metal tends to lose the electron because it has a higher electron affinity, and the nonmetal tends to gain the electron because it has a higher electronegativity. This has to do with the placement of the element on the periodic table. The further to the right you go, the more the element wants to gain electrons in an ionic compound.
Metal is metal. Nonmetal is everything else.
Is ceramic metal or nonmetal
Low density is a physical property that describes how closely packed the particles are in a substance. It is not related to whether a substance is a metal or nonmetal. Metals and nonmetals can exhibit low density depending on their atomic structure and arrangement.
Metal - metal compounds don't exist... Only metal-nonmetal and nonmetal-nonmetal
it can be a metal or nonmetal or metalliods
Tantalum is a metal.
nonmetal
nonmetal
nonmetal