A fresh surface of iron is lustrous.
no or yes
It is not certain.
Iron is not beautiful but dull is an exaggerated word.
At room temperature iron is a lustrous metallic gray colour.
It is a lustrous black to brownish ore (FeTiO3) and is the principal or of titanium. Though as you can see it does have as much Iron in it as titanium. However, there are better ores of iron.
Stainless steel is an alloy of iron, chromium, carbon and nickel. It never rust and hence,maintains its lustre. Whereas, the iron exposed in moist air rusts. It is covered with reddish substance and loses its lustre. And hence stainless steel has more lustre than iron.
No, the word 'lustrous' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (lustrous pearls, lustrous smile).The noun form of the adjective 'lustrous' is lustrousness.The word 'lustrous' is the adjective form of the noun luster.
The definition of lustrous according to Google: lus.trous adjective 1.Having luster; shining. It would be appropriate to assume that metal would be preferred to be lustrous to be more aesthetic.
Yes, many metals are lustrous.
Yes, many metals are lustrous.
Mg, magnesium always is forming magnesium oxide as an outer shell, this is why when you sand it it often becomes more lustrous. Same goes for aluminium and iron forms rust when mixed with water however this is more gradual than an oxide layer, the iron hydroxide layer is clearly more visible. However, they all appear quite stable depending on what you mean by "least stable".
Yes, neon sighting is lustrous