Metals
Crystalline quartz is has a glassy luster. Other forms of quartz can have a dull luster.
Dull Luster, because Xenon is colorless it cannot have shinny luster.
That is pearl brilliance; the shine and glow of a pearl. The greater and deeper the luster is, the more valuable the pearl. Peals with a high luster display strong and sharp light reflections and a good contrast between the bright and darker areas of the pearl. Pearls with low luster look milky, chalky and dull.
Boron is naturally a gas. It does not have luster.
Tungsten has a medium to high luster, shines like silver
Metals
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Transition and 'poor' metals
That is pearl brilliance; the shine and glow of a pearl. The greater and deeper the luster is, the more valuable the pearl. Peals with a high luster display strong and sharp light reflections and a good contrast between the bright and darker areas of the pearl. Pearls with low luster look milky, chalky and dull.
The element hydrogen does have a metallic form, which exists under conditions of both low temperature and high pressure. Under more usual conditions hydrogen is a gas and as such, has no luster. As a metal it has a metallic luster much like other metals.
the answer is luster/
the answer is luster/
All minerals have luster. There are different types of luster. Pyrite has metallic luster.
Crystalline quartz is has a glassy luster. Other forms of quartz can have a dull luster.
That would be the degree of luster.
luster