copper
It depends what you mean by slowly! Calcium burns in air and reacts fairly quietly with water, certainly much more slowly than the alkali metals do.
Copper burns and reacts in the air to form copper oxide, however i htink it reacts very slowly with water. Hope that helped ;)
Gold does not react with air or water, so it does not tarnish or corrode easily. Copper reacts slowly with air and water to form a patina. Silver reacts with sulfur compounds in the air to form tarnish. Iron reacts quickly with oxygen to form iron oxide (rust).
corrosion?
Metals in the reactivity series from aluminium to copper react with oxygen in the air to form the metal oxide. Aluminium and Zinc reacts very quickly, Iron reacts slowly at room temperature. Tin, Lead and Copper reacts with Oxygen in air when heated. Silver, Gold and Platinum do not react with Oxygen in air
Lead is a moderately reactive metal. It reacts slowly with air and water, but does not react as vigorously as highly reactive metals like sodium or potassium.
Thulium belongs to the Lanthanide family. Thulium is a silvery metal, so soft it can be cut with a knife. Thulium is stable in air, but reacts slowly with water, and rapidly with acids.
Lead is a moderately active metal. It dissolves slowly in water and in most cold acids. It reacts more rapidly with hot acids. It does not react with oxygen in the air readily and does not burn.
All alkali metals are soft, silvery-white and react violently with both water and air: they include lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and francium.
It depends which metal you are referring to.
Nope. Sodium reacts violently with water. The pure stuff is normally stored under oil.
Cool air.