Apart from being very much heavier than iron, lead is also very much softer than iron, so lead wouldn't last long if used as a hammer.
Apart from being very much heavier than iron, lead is also very much softer than iron, so lead wouldn't last long if used as a hammer.
There are many elements that are heavier than iron, including lead, gold, platinum, osmium, uranium, etc. Look at the periodic table of the elements.
Aluminum has about 1/3 the density of iron, therefore a given volume of aluminum would weigh about 1/3 as much as the same amount of iron. So no, aluminum is not heavier than iron; far from it.
The wooden stool is heavier than the iron nail
Lead is heavier than iron.
Apart from being very much heavier than iron, lead is also very much softer than iron, so lead wouldn't last long if used as a hammer.
Apart from being very much heavier than iron, lead is also very much softer than iron, so lead wouldn't last long if used as a hammer.
Yes iron is very much heavier then plastic.
Lead is much heavier than stainless steel.
There are many elements that are heavier than iron, including lead, gold, platinum, osmium, uranium, etc. Look at the periodic table of the elements.
No, atomically Iron is a heavier element
It isn't. How did you get that idea? Ice is much lighter than lead, for the same volume.
Iron is heavier because iron is a metal and metals are heavier but silica is not a metal so silica is lighter than iron.
The wooden stool is heavier than the iron nail
Aluminum has about 1/3 the density of iron, therefore a given volume of aluminum would weigh about 1/3 as much as the same amount of iron. So no, aluminum is not heavier than iron; far from it.
Elements heavier than iron are formed in super-nova explosions.