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The colors in the flame test depends on the specific emission lines of a chemical element.
The colors in the flame test depends on the specific emission lines of a chemical element.
A mineral may consist of a specific element, but is most likely a combination of elements. A mineral is an inorganic solid material found in nature that always has the same chemical makeup, atoms arranged in an orderly pattern, and properties such as cleavage, streak color, hardness and luster.
It is like liquid silverish color.
Each element has a specific electron configuration, causing each to have a distinctive color when exposed to fire
colors are different frequencies of light. atoms in objects vibrate in specific frequencies too. objects with atoms vibrating in the frequency corresponding to the color absorb that color and reflect the other frequencies they can't absorb. the color of an object is basically the frequency of light that it can't absorb.
Not always. Color is not very important for sculptures.
The colors in the flame test depends on the specific emission lines of a chemical element.
You can counter the styles declared for the general element type. For example, if the earlier CSS declared "background-color: #FF0000;" for all "div" elements, but you want a specific "div" tag to have a different background color, you can add "background-color: #00FF00;" as a declaration to that specific "div" tag. A live example: ---- div { background-color: #FF0000; } This division will be green, not red! ----
He doesn't have a specific color but he is known to wear alot of black,red & purple.
The color of an element is a PHYSICAL property, not a chemical property.
Not exactly. Different colors are different frequencies of light. "Spectrum", on the other hand, refers to an analysis of a mix of wavelengths.
Lithium flame gives a lilac colour when ignited.
It is an element.
element symbols, atomic number and atomic mass, or even color on some tables.
The colors in the flame test depends on the specific emission lines of a chemical element.
umm.... no. its impossible. color is the perception of reflected lightwaves with specific frequencies. therefore you can not "make" new colors. you might be able to rename them, but you cant make them.