You could say that it was almost half a carat, since a full carat is sometimes called 100 points.
A Flawless diamond is called Flawless on the clarity scale. The diamond is also graded according to its colour, its carat weight and its cut. Unless the stone is larger than about 10 carats, it might not have a name. However, if it is a strikingly unusual colour, a smaller stone might be named. You can read more about named diamonds, below.
a diamond has no special properties Your sort of right but a diamond is the allotrope carbon of where the carbon atoms are arranged in the specific type of cubic lattice called diamond cubic. Diamond is an optically isotropic crystal that is transparent to opaque. I might be wrong though!
The price for this stone depends on its cut, clarity, colour in addition to its carat weight, which you state at 17 carats.A local jeweler may be able to show you a stone of this quality, or refer you to someone who can.Another AnswerHere is information that might help you price the diamond that you want to buy. On Blue Nile today, you can buy:a round diamond weighing 15.67 carats, with H colour, VS1 clarity and pay US$1,047,910, or $66,874 per carat.a pear diamond weighing 16.34 carats, G colour, VVS2 clarity and pay US$625,741, or $38,295 per carat. NB: this stone has been treated (HPHT) and its colour altered.
No. The circles are circles. The poles are points. If the circles were points, then they might be called the Arctic and Antarctic Poles, but they wouldn't be called the Arctic and Antarctic Circles since they would be only points.
The likely word is "weighing" (measuring weight, or comparing).
Attracted by a magnetSpecifically a diamond is the allotrope carbon of where the carbon atoms are arranged in the specific type of cubic lattice called diamond cubic. Diamond is an optically isotropic crystal that is transparent to opaque. I might be wrong though! But im not sure what this has to do with attracting a magnet...
Crystals or glass are probably the least expensive material that attempts to appear diamond-like. An appropriate noun might be paste.
Yes, you do. As a jeweler, you might very well be called upon to decide whether or not a particular diamond is natural or simulated.
You might improve weighing food for a dog by placing a scale near the food. This makes it easier to weigh the food each time it is given to the dog and to get accurate measurements.
When weighing a rabbit after it has been feed the biggest improvement one might see is on the scale. The weight of the rabbit after eating should be higher than it was before eating.
No, but it might as well be.
a diamond has no special properties Your sort of right but a diamond is the allotrope carbon of where the carbon atoms are arranged in the specific type of cubic lattice called diamond cubic. Diamond is an optically isotropic crystal that is transparent to opaque. I might be wrong though!