It forms rust by binding with oxygen. The added weight is the oxygen.
Gold can not rust. Rust is oxidation, and gold is inert to oxygen and even most acids.
No single acid dissolves it. It is unaffected by oxygen or hydrogen sulfide. Gold does not rust, tarnish, corrode, crumble, decompose or decay, even after centuries on the sea floor or in a damp dripping cavern.
Gold does not rust, so neither do radioactive nuclides of gold.
Gold is not the only metal that does not rust. Copper is another metal that doesn't rust, and so is platinum and nickel.
No cause gold doesn't rust at al!!!
No, gold as a meal does not rust. However, if you have a necklace with a gold charm or gold accents on it, the metal around it may rust or tarnish, and could ruin the gold.
it rusts faster when it is damp cause the moisture of the damp and oxygen when they meet they create rust
It forms rust by binding with oxygen. The added weight is the oxygen.
Water contribute to the chemical reaction of iron rusting.
Gold can not rust. Rust is oxidation, and gold is inert to oxygen and even most acids.
No single acid dissolves it. It is unaffected by oxygen or hydrogen sulfide. Gold does not rust, tarnish, corrode, crumble, decompose or decay, even after centuries on the sea floor or in a damp dripping cavern.
Gold does not rust, so neither do radioactive nuclides of gold.
Iron reacts with oxygen in air to for rust.
damp conditions with ready access to air
Gold is not the only metal that does not rust. Copper is another metal that doesn't rust, and so is platinum and nickel.
no