No, radium does not glow in the dark. If it did, then the whole world would be glowing in the dark. Rocks, soil, plants, and any living thing contains some radioactive material.
The myth can be traced back to the "radium craze" of the early 20th century, when radium was just about added to everything. When the radium was added to paint, it became luminous.
This was the origin of the "radium glow". In fact, it wasn't the radium glowing, but it was reacting with the copper and zinc in the paint, causing it to become luminous, in a phenomenon called "radio-luminescence".
Its color is floresent ,and glows when not reflected on by any visiable light.
Radium. I think.
First of all, you need to say what a fireflighter is, but I think it glows by chemicals in the body (if you mean a firefly) and they are signaling for a mate. Hope that helps you!
tungsten is a poor conductor of electricity,tungsten glows when electrical energy from the energy source is flowing through the conductor of electricity and when electrical energy reach the metal filament(tungsten) the tungsten gets electrical energy and produce heat when it became white-hot and the tungsten glows the glows is called light.
The maximum density in this list: radium with 5,50 g/cm3.
Radium (Ra), atomic number 88, is the most reactive alkaline earth metal. It has the most energy levels of all the alkaline earth metals therefore it's electrons are more easily taken away.
Radium glows in the dark and is in glow bands
It doesn't. Radium is radioactive. Radium plus a phosphor glows in the dark.
Radium.
i think it's because of this fluro chemical.
the positive aspects of radium is glows in the dark and added another element to the periodic table of elements the negative aspects are it gives cancer and if ingested your body will believe its calcium causing weakening of the bones and something called radium jaw were the jaw falls of from being weakened from the radium.
Radium glows in the dark and is radioactive. When it decays into Radon gas, it emits alpha particles. It is fairly close to its compound radiumchlorite because like radium, it also decays emiting alpha particles. However, radiumchlorite is used to help cure canser. Overal, radium is like its most comon compound but can also have properties not related to its compounds at all.
I don't think so. You can look it up online.
FireFlies
It absorbs light so it can glow in the dark.
fungus
A liquid because it glows in the dark
calcium