Yes it does, but not as shiny as silver or gold. That is one feature that makes it a metalloid.
The lump of silicon on my bench is a shiny grey colour, with some conchoidal fracture. Definitely lustrous.
Yes, this is mostly true. It starts to become untrue near silicon.
it reflects light
Look down at the link "Atomic structure of silicon atoms". There you will find the atomic structure of silicon atoms.
Ok Conductor and shiny
Yes it does, but not as shiny as silver or gold. That is one feature that makes it a metalloid.
tiny particles from rock.
Silicon is something that has a shiny luster even though it is naturally quite brittle. Other things with a shiny luster include mineral quartz, metallic hematite, and galena.
Mica
Pure silicon is gray in color and has a metallic luster.
Any metal, like silicon.
What do you think... SHINY!!!!
It is a shiny, hard, grayish-white metalloid in the carbon group, chemically similar to tin and silicon.
The lump of silicon on my bench is a shiny grey colour, with some conchoidal fracture. Definitely lustrous.
The shiny Charamander will be a black color.
They look like shiny balls.