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 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 tetrachloride is a colorless liquid with a slightly sweet odor. It does not have a natural color.
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.