Bromine is a red liquid.
Bromine is a nonmetal because it doesn't have luster, and it isn't malleable, which are the two main characterisitcs of metals.
No, the chemical properties of calcium and bromine are not similar. The melting point for Calcium is 8390C, bromine's is -7.250C. Calcium's boiling point is 1484°C, bromine's is 58.750C. etc. Calcium is a silvery white, soft alkaline earth metal. Although none of the alkaline earths occur free in nature, calcium compounds are abundant. Bromine is a reddish-brown liquid, and it has a metallic luster in solid form.
an addition reaction takes place when butene decoulourises bromine solution x
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
Bromine has a metallic luster in its sold form
Bromine is a red liquid.
Bromine is a nonmetal because it doesn't have luster, and it isn't malleable, which are the two main characterisitcs of metals.
Bromine is a nonmetal because it doesn't have luster, and it isn't malleable, which are the two main characterisitcs of metals.
bright yellow, metallic luster
diatomic
A waxy luster gives minerals a shiny appearance.
No, the chemical properties of calcium and bromine are not similar. The melting point for Calcium is 8390C, bromine's is -7.250C. Calcium's boiling point is 1484°C, bromine's is 58.750C. etc. Calcium is a silvery white, soft alkaline earth metal. Although none of the alkaline earths occur free in nature, calcium compounds are abundant. Bromine is a reddish-brown liquid, and it has a metallic luster in solid form.
Bromine is not a metal. It is a nonmetal halogen and is the inly nonmetal that is liquid at room temperature. Its chemical symbol is Br and has an atomic number of 35. It is reddish-brown in color with a metallic luster (even though it is not a metal).
There is Luster Dragon and Luster Dragon #2, you may have three of each as they have different names. The one from LOD, the 2400/1400 one, was mistakenly named just 'Luster Dragon' in its original printing. This one is however Luster Dragon #2 and is considered such even if you are using the misprinted card.
Asking if something "has luster" is about the same as asking if it "has appearance". EVERYTHING has a luster, the question is "what kind?" For halite, most people would describe it as a glassy or vitreous luster.
an addition reaction takes place when butene decoulourises bromine solution x