Lithium.
Lithium.
well, that depends on what sort you are talking about. if you are talking about atoms, then you want the lightest metal. if you are talking about sheets, there is no answer. it all depends on the temperature. the hotter it is, the stretchier it will be, but at room temperature, there are no metals that can do this. the only metal you have to cool to stretch is Mercury, which is liquid at room temperature. hope this helps all
The lightest of all structural metals is magnesium. It is commonly used in aerospace and automotive industries due to its high strength-to-weight ratio.
Yes all group one elements (alkali metals) are explosive when they come into contact with water.
All Metals
Hydrogen is not included in all metals. In fact, hydrogen is not a metal but a non-metal gas. While hydrogen can interact with some metals to form compounds like metal hydrides, it is not a component of all metals.
All metals except alloys of metals are elements, but not all elements are metals.
Sorry they are all metals!
Ferrous metals are all metal alloys that include iron.
SOLID Under standard conditions Lithium is the lightest metal and the least dense solid element. Like all alkali metals, lithium is highly reactive and flammable. For this reason, it is typically stored in mineral oil.
All the solids are not metals they may be non metals and other compounds but except Mercury all the metals are solids.
Silver has the highest conductivity among all metals.