From the description, it seems to be a metal.
Yes.
Yes, gold can be hammered into sheets. A piece of gold the size of your thumbnail can be hammered into a sheet the size of a tennis court. Gold can be milled or pressed down to gold foil. This is the thinnest millage for gold and can be 50 times as thin as the human hair. It is so fine, your breath can break it.
Gold is a very malleable element. It can be bent and shaped fairly easily (which is why gold is mixed with other elements to make jewelry stronger). Because of this, Rutherford was able to compress a sample of gold until it formed a sheet that was only a few atoms thick.
harddisks are constructed from an aluminum platter (conductor) coated with a magnetic metal oxide (insulator)floppy discs are constructed from a plastic sheet (insulator) coated with a magnetic metal oxide (insulator)however the function of computer disks in no way depends on the property of being a conductor/insulator, only on its ability to retain tiny magnetic domains while permitting them to be easily modified.
A charged metallic plate is a thin rectangular (or square) sheet that carries a surface charge. Because metal is a conductor, you can assume that the surface charge is spread uniformly over the area of the plate.
Any object will "try" to retain heat energy. The material determines how well it will accomplish this. For example, metal is a good conductor, so a sheet of metal will not retain heat very well. Air, or the other hard, is a bad conductor, so fiberglass insolation (will it's many air pockets) will tend to retain heat for some time.
If you hammer something into a sheet it isn't a good conductor of heat because it's making a hole in the sheet witch if it's a windy day it is not conducting heat Jason age,11
No, it will not.
No
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It is malleability.
No, because it cannot be hammered into a thin sheet without shattering
Yes Palladium is (according to the Periodic Table) in fact malleable meaning it can be hammered into sheet metal or other things
comdictoe
it can be hammered into a thin sheet (malleability)
it can be hammered into a thin sheet (malleability)
They are called "gold leaves".One sheet is called "gold leaf".....
Yes, gold can be hammered into sheets. A piece of gold the size of your thumbnail can be hammered into a sheet the size of a tennis court. Gold can be milled or pressed down to gold foil. This is the thinnest millage for gold and can be 50 times as thin as the human hair. It is so fine, your breath can break it.