As metals lose Heat (Thermal Energy), they become more Dense. They also become more Brittle, and prone to shatter on strong impact!
The most common example is glass; also all the metals.
Mercury is the only metal that is a liquid at room temperature, despite it's high density.
Metals:All metals are hard except sodiumAll metals have a high density except sodiumAll metals are solid at room temperature except mercuryNon-metals: All non-metals are insulators to electricity except graphiteAll non-metals are brittle except diamondi dont have an answer for 3 sorry! :(
No. While frozen methane, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen do exist on Pluto, they are not metals.
Lead is a nonsonorous metal at room temperature; but at the temperature of liquid nitrogen is sonorous. Another examples are alkali metals, mercury etc.
It has been used for this.
The most common example is glass; also all the metals.
Mercury is the only metal that is a liquid at room temperature, despite it's high density.
No. Burning is generally something that occurs at an elevated temperature. Liquid nitrogen is a cryogenic material; it is terribly cold. It is possible for liquid nitrogen to turn some metals as brittle as glass or a candy cane, making them easy to break. But it cannot burn metal, thermically nor chemically.
Yes Metals have a high density.
Nitrogen and Phosphorus
Lawrence Arnold Greenberg has written: 'A study of the rates of absorption of oxygen and nitrogen in liquid iron and liquid iron alloys' -- subject(s): Metallurgy, Oxygen, Iron, Gases in metals, Iron alloys, Nitrogen
For an obect to be able to float in a liquid it has to weigh less (have less mass) than the weight (mass) of the liquid displaced by the object, so low density objects weigh little with respect to their size (volume) and the volume of the amount of liquid displaced. English corrected by GregorS This applies between any viscous media so a gas such as Helium will float above a heavier gas such as Nitrogen and Hydrogen will float above Helium. likewise a low density liquid oil will float above a heavier density liquid such as water which in turn will float above a denser liquid such as mercury. B.T.W mercury is so dense that metals such as iron, copper and many other "heavy" materials will float on on the mercury.
no it dosent
No, nitrogen is a non-metal and not a metalloid. A metalloid is a element which shows properties of both metals and non-metals.
Nitrogen is an element. It is not contain atoms of other elements. It has no metallic atoms.
It varies. Many metal have high density. In fact, the metals iridium and osmium are the densest substances known to man. However some metals are light. Lithium and sodium are even less dense than water.