Yes, plutonium is a reactive chemical element.
Plutonium is a brittle metal. It can shatter like glass under pressure. It is not powdery unless it has been intentionally processed into a powder form.
Plutonium is a silvery-gray metal that tarnishes in air, resembling the appearance of other metals like nickel and aluminum. It is typically found in solid form and is dense and highly toxic.
An answer is impossible without a definition of a "powerful element"; and this syntagma is not adequate for a chemical element. But it is true that plutonium is very dangerous (radioactive and toxic) and expensive.
Plutonium is not flammable in the same way that materials like gasoline or paper are. However, it can react with oxygen in the air to form plutonium oxide, which can be pyrophoric, meaning it can ignite spontaneously in air. Handling of plutonium requires strict safety protocols to prevent accidental fires.
Plutonium in its normal state is a silvery-white metal with a faint yellow hue. Due to its high radioactivity, it must be handled with extreme caution.
Hydrolith is a saltlike binary compound used as reducing agent and a source of hydrogen like CaH2
The fresh surface of plutonium has a silvery metallic appearance.
The fresh surface of plutonium is metallic, silvery.
A fresh surface of plutonium is silvery, metallic.
Rubber
A fresh surface of plutonium is silvery, metallic.
Yes, but there are also trinary (and may be quaternary) ionic salts like alum: KAl(SO4)2 potassium-aluminum sulfate
Fortunately any person tasted this type of water ! Plutonium is radioactive and toxic.
Plutonium is a brittle metal. It can shatter like glass under pressure. It is not powdery unless it has been intentionally processed into a powder form.
Plutonium is a silvery-gray metal that tarnishes in air, resembling the appearance of other metals like nickel and aluminum. It is typically found in solid form and is dense and highly toxic.
A plutonium atom has 92 electrons and 150 protrons. It has three shells and is a very unstable element.
An answer is impossible without a definition of a "powerful element"; and this syntagma is not adequate for a chemical element. But it is true that plutonium is very dangerous (radioactive and toxic) and expensive.