yes cause its copper
When chemicals from acid rain and other weathering reacts with elements such as copper or bronze . For example , the statue of liberty is really copper , the same substance as a penny , but yet its green . that was caused by the chemical weathering of rain , snow , and other precipitation .
with all that green on it (corrosion), it's not worth anything more than one cent.
You cant-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------edit buy Electchuyou CAN turn a penny green just soak it in water and dont dry it it should turn green after few days/a week or more
If you use a abrasive to scrape the rust off, then it is a physical change. If you utilize a chemical that combines with the rust leaving the unoxidized penny behind, then it is a chemical change.
To my knowledge, a penny is not a chemical change. No, I think it is instead a coin; a unit of currency, mostly made from zinc and plated with copper. Nothing I'm describing has anything to do with chemical changes.
the Statue of Liberty is green because it has been there for a long time. Since metal rusts, the Statue of Liberty also rusted. In fact, it rusted enough for it to turn green. If a penny rusts enough, it will also turn green.
It's aged copper so it's like a penny that's why the statue of liberty is green
The outside skin of the Statue of Liberty is made of copper. When it was first made it was the color of a penny. Over time the copper reacts with the water in the air to formal compounds that are green-blue in color.
The Statue of Liberty was made out of pennies so the original color of the Statue is brownish like a penny. But as time passed by the air and other chemical reaction faded away the color leaving it green.
At first the french gave the statue of liberty to New York! When it first arrivedit was copper but it oxidized and turned green. If you have ever seen a green penny, that's an example.
A color of a penny as it was made of copper.
are you high because i know i sure am
No it turns just a greenish color. Look at the Statue of Liberty for example.
Oxidation is what is seen in on Lady Liberty. If you want to be even more specific, the color of Lady Liberty is verdigris. Other cases of oxidation can be seen if you look at pennies in a wishing well.
Copper is a brown solid. Take a look at an American or Canadian penny. In nature, copper is usually found as an oxide that is bluish green. The Statue of Liberty is copper and has oxidized to this bluish green color.
No. Gold is too expensive, and there is barely enough gold in the world to account for a monument the size of the Statue of Liberty. The Statue of Liberty is and always has been made of steel. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Actually the guy above me is wrong...steel wouldn't explain the green... the only thing that would oxidize into that green shade is a malleable copper that would appear gold.... so pretty much yeah, gold to the eye, but cheap copper... it'd look pretty cool tho...
Acid in the rain reacted with the copper to turn it green. That is why there is sometimes green on pennies. Acid in the rain reacted with the copper to turn it green. That is why there is sometimes green on pennies. Acid in the rain reacted with the copper to turn it green. That is why there is sometimes green on pennies. Acid in the rain reacted with the copper to turn it green. That is why there is sometimes green on pennies.