Sounds like gold.
The malleable, ductile, and shiny element is gold. It is a precious metal known for its beauty and valuable properties.
Barium is not malleable or ductile as it is a brittle metal. It does exhibit some lustre, giving it a shiny appearance.
Metallic elements such as gold, silver, and copper typically possess attributes of hardness, shininess, and ductility. They are malleable, can be polished to a high luster, and can be stretched into wire without breaking.
Those are metals.
Those are metals.
Metals
Most of the d-block elements are ductile and malleable as , Iron , Copper , Silver , Gold.
Yes, metalloids are ductile they are also malleable, but is not shiny.
Copper (Cu) is a metal. Metals are elements that are typically shiny, malleable, and good conductors of heat and electricity. Non-metals, on the other hand, are elements that are generally not shiny, brittle, and poor conductors of heat and electricity.
nonmetals
Yes, ductile materials can be stretched into wires, malleable materials can be hammered into thin sheets, and lustrous materials have a shiny appearance due to reflecting light. Some examples of ductile, malleable, and lustrous materials include gold, silver, and copper.
It would be the metal magnesium. Metals have luster (are shiny) and are ductile and malleable. The other elements listed are a gas (He), and the solid nonmetal carbon.