Aluminum foil is opaque.
Is tin foil Translucent,opaque, translucent
Opaque, I think
In optical wavelengths it is.
it is opaque
yes it is opaque
Opaque material
Opaque
yes
no
Possibly, but tin foil is rather fragile, and easily torn. A cotton or silk fabric would make a better, more resilient, parachute.
Kitchen foil despite sometimes being called tin foil is actually made of aluminium. Kitchen foil is simply very thin sheets of aluminium.
What we usually refer to as tin foil is almost always aluminum foil. Aluminum is a very good conductor of heat, and aluminum foil makes a very poor insulator. The exception might be in the case of radiant energy, which it reflects well, and even better when it is polished.
Aluminum and tin are two different elements. They have different physical and chemical properties. Tin is element 50. Aluminum is element 13. Tin is denser and has a lower melting point than aluminum. Tin can reach 2+ and 4+ oxidation states while aluminum can only achieve the 3+ oxidation state.
There are three different ways of transferring heat. These are by radiation, conduction and convection. The sun's rays heat the surface of the earth by radiation. If you were to wrap a ice cube in Aluminium foil and place it in hot sunlight it would take longer to melt because the sun's radiation would be reflected. However if placed an ice cube wrapped in foil on a hot plate, it would melt just as quickly as if there was no foil. This is because in this case Conduction is the main way heat is passed to the cube and aluminum is a good conductor.
yes??
Tin foil... tin Aluminum foil... aluminum :)
No, tin foil is made out of aluminum which can not be magnetized.
The "inside" of tin foil is the dull side. The "outside" of tin foil is the shiny side.
Tin Foil Phoenix was created in 1997.
Yes. 'Tin' foil is actually flattened out sheets of Aluminium.
Tin cans, tin foil...
When someone uses the term tin foil, that person is almost always talking about aluminum foil. Tin foil is an old term, and it has carried into the present where it is frequently used to mean aluminum or kitchen foil. Bon appétit!
I'm guessing that there would not be tin foil in heaven.It's unlikely, since the metals mentioned are far more precious and beautiful than tin foil.
Tin foil used to be popular (which is why sometimes you will hear people referring to aluminum foil as "tin foil"Tin(Sn)
Tin foil
because tin foil is less dense then water so it makes it float!!!!