light black.
well it depends what u mean by carbon thers carbon gas carbon fibre well carbon fibre is like a black/grey wrong carbons color is yellow
Carbon-14 itself is a radioactive isotope of carbon and does not have a distinct color. In its natural state, carbon-14 would not have a visible color.
Carbon dioxide is colorless.
cole is carbon in a solid form carbon is black
Carbon tetrachloride is a colorless liquid with a slightly sweet odor. It does not have a natural color.
Carbon is a black color. It got it's name from the Latin word "carbo" meaning charcoal. The black color of smoke actually comes from unburned specks of carbon.
Carbon dioxide gas is colorless
Carbon is burned to carbon dioxide, a colorless gas.
Assuming you are asking the color of "Carbon", most forms are black. There are three "allotropes" of Carbon: Graphite, Diamond, and Amorphous. Diamond is clear but of course quite rare.
When carbon is ignited, it burns with a blue flame.
Black is the physical color of carbon, not its chemical property.
Carbon atoms are not colored; they are simply neutral in color. The color we see in objects comes from the way light interacts with the material's structure at a molecular level.