conductors are generally are made of metals and naturally metals are of shiny and so u can tell that all conductors of heat shiny
Conductors of heat, malleable,shiny
metals are shiny and good conductors of heat and electricity. Nonmetals are dull and poor conductors of heat and electricity.
Metals such as copper, aluminum, and silver are good conductors of heat and have a shiny surface. These materials allow heat to pass through them easily due to their high thermal conductivity. The shiny surface is a result of their high reflectivity to light, which also contributes to their ability to conduct heat efficiently.
They are shiny, malleable, they have high melting and boiling points, and they are good conductors of heat and electricity.
Metals are good conductors of heat and electricity, malleable (can be hammered into thin sheets), ductile (can be drawn into wires), and have luster (shiny appearance).
Metals tend to be lustrous, ductile, malleable, and good conductors of heat and electricity.
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.
Shiny objects are insulators because their surface reflects light and heat rather than absorbing them. This prevents the transfer of energy in the form of heat, making them poor conductors of heat and electricity. The reflective surface of shiny objects acts as a barrier to the flow of electrical currents or heat energy.
All metals are conductors of electricity and heat.
Generally speaking, materials that are good conductors of heat are good conductors of electricity. But there is a notable exception. Diamond, an allotrope of carbon, conducts heat better than any metal, but it is an electrical insulator.
no
Many - but not all - are poor conductors of electric current.