No. The two metals are seldom found together in nature (Mercury is found in the mineral cinnabar). However, some industrial mining processes used the affinity between the metals to remove trace gold from ores.
(Mercury is atomic number 80 and Gold is 79, so to turn mercury into gold, you would need to turn a proton into a neutron. This requires a cyclotron.)
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature. The others are all solid. It is also a very dense metal (twice as dense as iron) and it can be used to dissolve gold. Many mercury compounds are highly toxic, especially methyl mercury. Mercury sulfide is the least water-soluble compound known to science.
Mercury
No, Mercury does not have any other name other than Mercury. Mercury is also called quicksilver.
Mercury is 57.9x106m from the sun.
Mercury's diameter is 4879km.
Mercury and gold are two different elements. There is no mercury in gold and there is no gold in mercury. If there is some gold mixed in with the mercury to begin with, then there are ways to separate it out. If there is no gold in the mercury to begin with, then there's no way to get any gold out of it.
Gold Mercury Retort.
gold: 79 mercury: 80
Gold is more dense than mercury
No. One can not transform one element into another. However Mercury may be used to extract gold from gold containing sand. The gold will dissolve in the mercury which can then be boiled away to leave the gold. This will APPEAR to make mercury change into gold but this is not the case, you have to put the gold into the mercury first.PLEASE NOTE - Mercury is VERY VERY toxic/poisonous and using it to extract gold this way is dangerous to the environment and harmful to the people doing it (especially the boiling away mercury phase) - do not refine gold this way, use a mechanical separation process.
At one time, mercury WAS used to extract gold from gold ore. The rock was crushed, and washed over a copper sheet coated with mercury. Gold forms an amalgam with mercury, and some of the gold would be trapped in the mercury. The mercury would be scraped from the copper, and distilled, leaving behind the gold. Other processes are used today.
Gold is a higher density than Mercury so it will sink if placed into a container of mercury.
Mercury was used to dissolve gold from the ore. The mercury/gold mixture was then heated to drive off the mercury leaving the gold. The mercury vapours were detrimental to the environment and the jhealth of the prospectors
Mercury
At time mercury was used to extract metallic gold from gold ore. The ore was crushed to powder, and washed over a copper sheet covered in mercury. The gold would combine with the mercury, and be recovered by distilling the mercury. This was very dangerous due to the poisonous nature of mercury- and it only captured about 15% of the gold. It is no longer used in gold mining.
Not directly, since gold is not very reactive. However, to get gold, mercury is often used - and mercury is extremely toxic.
Gold is particularly attracted to mercury. In fact, mercury is used to extract gold from the ore that it is found in. Then a cyanide is used to make the mercury 'let go' of the gold in a manner in which people can recover it.