No, not really. Gold (Au, #79) is the most un-reactive of the transition metals. It will react with oxygen and the halogens, but not very readily, and extremely slowly.
Yes but it is a very poor conductor of electricity
It's a sort of gold coloured metal.
At room temperature radium is a solid metal.
Nitrous oxide, N2O, is a colorless gas at room temperature.
Gold can be found naturally as veins running throughout granite and quartz, or with the element tellurium.
No, Gold is a solid at 21 degrees Celsius, or 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Gold becomes a liquid at 1337.33 degrees K, or 1064.18 degrees Celsius or 1947.52 degrees Fahrenheit.
Fluorine is a gas at room temperature and it looks pale yellow.
Gold is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature radium is a solid metal.
Gold is a solid at Room temperature and pressure.
It depends on the temperature. For instance, Mercury is a liquid at room temperature. Gold is solid at room temperature.
Gold is a solid at room temperature, and well above it, too.
it is white and crystalline. a solid at room temperature.
it is a reddish brown liquid
The appearance of chromium is as a steel.
solid It is common to observe that gold jewellery is hard, not liquid or gaseous.
Gold melts at 1064.18 °C, whereas room temperature is taken to be 20 to 25°C.
it is solidGold is a solid at room temperature. Its melting point is 1064 oC Gold is obviously a solid at room temperature, because how else would you get gold bars, gold (pure) Jewellery etc if it were in a liquid or gas state.
The aspect of rutherfordium is not known.