There are two ways. He could transform the copper into gold using a particle accelerator. There are a few problems with doing it that way--particle accelerators are expensive, running them is expensive and the gold you'd get that way would be radioactive, and would decay into lead quickly. Particle accelerators are also very scarce, and there is a review board that approves experiments before you can do them; no review board would sign off on an alchemy experiment.
The other way is much simpler: Buy a bunch of condemned homes and tear them down. Recover the copper wiring and copper pipes, then sell the copper for money to buy gold.
You can't. An element is the simplest form that anything can be broken down into.
The copper IUD does not change pigmentation. If you have an excess of copper (WIlson's disease), the disease could cause change in pigmentation, and the IUD could worsen that. Talk with your health care provider about your particular situation.
they could discover a new atom and it would change
None really, but if you were really rich, you could get scientist to build a large air dome over Mars, you could live there.
A new discovery has indicated that a copper light could reduce the effects of rusting on things such as vehicles. This is an important discovery that could change standard practices on a global level.
Copper (lead etc.) into gold.
Well a Psp1000 will be a Psp1000 and you can not really change that. its features are really the same
It could be the result of better information, a new model or both. Alternatively, the scientist might be modelling different scenarios.
A beekeeper could be a scientist, but not necessarily.
The cast of Six Degrees Could Change the World - 2008 includes: Alec Baldwin as himself Rajendra Pachauri as IPCC Scientist
Formation of a new substance: When magnesium reacts with copper sulfate, the blue color of copper sulfate fades as copper metal is formed, indicating a chemical change has occurred. Release of gas: In this reaction, bubbles of gas may be observed, which could be hydrogen gas being evolved as magnesium displaces copper from copper sulfate. Temperature change: The reaction between magnesium and copper sulfate is exothermic, meaning it releases heat. The mixture may feel warm or hot to touch during the reaction, indicating a temperature change has taken place.
she chose to become a scientist to prove her sister (Nancy Blackburn) wrong about how she could change the world.