No. Gold is very nonreactive, which is one of the reasons it is considered a precious metal: it can last for thousands of years without corroding or tarnishing.
Gold is considered a non-reactive metal because it is very unreactive with most substances. It does not tarnish or corrode easily, which is why it is often used for jewelry and other applications where long-term stability is desired.
Gold is least reactive with aqueous solutions of metal ions among tin, zinc, gold, and calcium. Gold is a noble metal and does not readily react with most common reagents, including aqueous solutions of metal ions.
people use gold because its a un reactive metal {very easy to extract}
This metal is gold.
Gold
They are metals. They are in the same group. They are very reactive. They are volatile.
Chlorine is a very reactive non-metal. It readily combines with other elements to form compounds and is highly electronegative, meaning it has a strong tendency to gain electrons in chemical reactions.
Cesium is the most chemically reactive metal.
no, gold is the most stable metal that there is.
Gold is a very unreactive element, so it occurs as gold metal in nature. However, aluminum is more reactive, and so it occurs in aluminum ore (aluminum oxide) in nature, not as aluminum metal.
Carbon is a very reactive nonmetal but not the most reactive.
Gold is not a reactive metal. So it is not reacting.