why u asking me mate?
i have a frickin donkey brain
baby ohh yaa
Pure calcium is a shiny silver colour because it is a metal. All metals are shiny (which is most of the Periodic Table).
They were exposed to and reacted with oxygen in the air.
Yes, because calcium is a metal. The fresh surface of calcium has a silvery appearance.
It is an Alkaline Earth Metal
shiny
shiny
Calcium is a shiny metal and is solid at room temperature.
They were exposed to and reacted with oxygen in the air.
Yes, because calcium is a metal. The fresh surface of calcium has a silvery appearance.
why u asking me mate? i have a frickin donkey brain baby ohh yaa
You are probably thinking of Chromium but un-oxidised Calcium is shiny too. Same applies to Cadmium, Caesium, Californium, Cerium, Cobalt, Copernicium, Copper and Curium.
calcium, iron, manganese, molybdenum, zinc or caesium.
Yes. Some kind of Lime or calcium build up remover. Maybe Drayno. Yeah that'll get it nice and shiny.
'Marble' is meta-formosed limestone or chalk. Limestone or chalk has been subject to either heat and/or pressure, and become the harder shiny rock of marble. Marble is calcium carbonate!!!!
Marble. The crystals are ofcalcite (calcium carbonate). It's only smooth when polished, but it takes a high polish.
i can get them shiny but once i get them shiny, when I polish them they get scratched and become less shiny.
Shiny, as is bright, is shiny, NOT shiney as most mistake it for.
No, the shiny Pokemon stay shiny always. If the shiny status was a hack they may lose their shiny status, esp. if they get the pokerus