It is malleable.
Mercury is non-ductile and non-malleable, as it is a liquid.Lead is malleable but not ductile.
metals are malleable in nature
The chemical symbol for neodymium is Nd.
Yes, uranium is indeed malleable, but it is also ductile and radioactive.
A metal is malleable because aluminium, for example, can be compressed to a thin sheet and copper can be stretched to form a wire. On the other hand, a nonmetal isn't malleable. For example, carbon is extremely solid (it is a component of diamond). A metalloid, though, may be malleable or not depending on it's characteristics. Tin is a malleable substance (at some point) but silicon isn't... it's a rock!
Neodymium is a soft, malleable, and ductile metal with a silvery-white appearance.
Mercury is non-ductile and non-malleable, as it is a liquid.Lead is malleable but not ductile.
No, metals are generally malleable.
i only know that malleable means to sculp or shape
no
Gold is highly malleable and almost non-reactive.
yes
All non-metals are non malleable
argon is not malleable because it is not metal, non-metal elements can't be a malleable. but if it is metal or metalloids possibly it can be.
Xenon is a gas at STP. Gases are not malleable.
Metalloid
Non-metals.