assuming that this is a serious question...yes, they have different atomic properties.
No, because old gold coins didn't contain any silver.
Silver does not turn into gold after cleaning. Silver and gold are two different metals with distinct properties and cannot transform into one another through cleaning or any other process.
the ability to not react with oxygen in the air.
18k gold should not appear silver in color because it is primarily composed of gold, which has a distinct yellow hue. If an 18k gold piece appears silver, it may have a different metal alloy mixed in, such as white gold or platinum, which can give it a silver-like appearance.
Silver and yellow do not create a new color when mixed. The colors remain distinct from each other.
None. Because matter of factuality, silver is not a color and so is gold. They're metals. You will just create an alloy. But if you will insist that they are colors, then you'll get two; silvery-gold or golden silver. - jovencius.
White gold is an alloy that typically consists of gold and white metals such as palladium, nickel, or silver. The addition of these white metals gives white gold its distinct color and luster.
In a silver-gold alloy, silver is the solvent and gold is the solute. Silver acts as the base in which gold is dissolved.
Silver does not have an exact smell nor a strong one Ed: Actually, it does, but the smell is hard to describe. Try smelling a genuine silver item and then compare it to other (perhaps supposedly) silver items. This is a great method if you are interested in antiques and want to see if a certain item is genuine silver. Good luck!! =D
Gold is heavier than silver. Gold has a higher density than silver, which means that a specific volume of gold will weigh more than the same volume of silver.
It was gold and silver
If you breed a gold and silver chao, you can get * a Gold chao * a Silver chao * a Gold chao with silver highlights * Or a Silver chao with gold highlights If you didn't get any of these, somethings wrong with your gamecube/dreamcast