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Oxidation of the metal
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aluminium - boiled rice and non-veg itemscopper - mushroom
No. Only a few metals can be made magnetic
Metals are not made, only mined, refined, and used. Metals are used for making things like kettles, airplanes, appliances, cars, bicycles, and stuff like that.
Oxidation of the metal
Elements with luster would be classified as metals. Metals will also have the properties of malleability and ductility. Luster: the shine of a metal object Malleability: the flexibility of a metal Ductility: the ability of a metal to be pulled into thin wires
stainless steel
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the luster means the shine or the coating that are on the elements of the table that throw shine or show glimse of getting colorful and they represt mostly the metals as mettals have ustre and vry shiny surfaced , smooth also and ductile
oxygen does not have luster seeing as it is invisible, it is said to be malleable though.
aluminium - boiled rice and non-veg itemscopper - mushroom
It's not exactly that rocks don't have luster/can't be shiny, but luster is a characteristic that we typically apply to minerals to help categorize and describe them. Rocks are made up of minerals so you may be able to spot some of the luster within a rock depending on the minerals it is made of.
Luster is: "The reflection of light from the surface of a mineral, described by its quality and intensity; the appearance of a mineral in reflected light." Common descriptive words would be glassy, dull, earthy, waxy, vitreous, metallic, etc...
Most metals lose their shine as they react with gases in the atmosphere or in a liquid.. The surface layer may react to fom an oxide, hydrated oxides, sulfide, sulfates, carbonates. Generally ths process makes the surface dull and it may get pitted. The process is called corrosion when it is iron rusting and tarnishing when it is silver forming black silver sulfide or copper forming a mixture of greenish products, "patina" whose composition depends on the location.Some metals do not lose their shine. Common examples are gold and platinum which are used as jewellery. Aluminium still looks shiny but there is thin layer of aluminium oxide which prevents the reactive aluminium metal from corroding.
The way light bounces off a mineral is called a luster. Luster is shiny, metallic, dull, glassy or greasy. Rocks are made of minerals.
"Tuff", a rock made up of volcanic ash and other things, is not a mineral, so it has no hardness index or luster.