Well,
Helium is a gas or vapour/air so their for it has no qualtities that you have listed about seeing it isn't metal so it cant be shiny :D
Hope that helped?
Ductility is a property of solid, not gases like helium
Helium is however chemically inert, due to the presence of completely filled orbitals
Yes, metalloids are ductile they are also malleable, but is not shiny.
yes if thin and under heat and is shiny
Metals are generally very good conductors of heat and electricity, hard, shiny, malleable, ductile, and solid at room temperature. Some are magnetic.
*Metalloids semi-shiny semi-conductors malleable somewhat ductile basically the in between the extremes of gas and metals
Those are metals.
Yes, metalloids are ductile they are also malleable, but is not shiny.
Metals are good conductors of heat and electricity, are ductile, malleable and shiny, and most of them are solid (except mercury). A non metal is a bad conductor of heat and electricity, are not malleable, ductile or shiny, and can be a solid, liquid, or gas.
Sounds like gold.
Sounds like gold.
Well, since tin is a metal on the periodic table of elements it would have to be: Shiny malleable ductile a good heat conductor a good electrical conductor
Metals
nonmetals
yes if thin and under heat and is shiny
metals
Physical properties of metals: 1. good conductor of electricity 2.Conduct heat quickly 3.Can be formed into wires and pipes 4.very shiny and easily polished
Hard and strong Solid Shiny Good conductor od heat and electricity Malleable (you can mold it) Ductile (when molded it does not lose ant properties) Chuck xxx
react to oxides, shiny appearence, good conductivity, malleable, ductile