answersLogoWhite

0

Osmium is, itself, a transition metal.

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is the densest of common metals?

Osmium is the densest metal, you can use google for figuring out the rest.


Which one is the heaviest metal silver or Osmium?

Osmium has the highest density among metals so is heaviest metal.


What are the four metals don't react with acids?

These metals are three: ruthenium, iridium, osmium.


What metals are dense?

Gold, platinum. Tin and lead are also quite dense. Osmium is the most dense on the periodic table.


What is the most common isotope of the number of the electrons in osmium?

The most common isotope of osmium is 192 Os. All osmium isotopes contain 76 electrons.


What metals are heavier than gold?

iridium osmium platinum plutonium


Which element On the periodic table has the greatest density?

Heavy metals such as lead, gold, tungsten or platinum. Uranium is very dense, but an element and metal called osmium is the most dense.


What family is osium in?

Osmium is in the family of 'transition metals' in the periodic table.


What group number is osmium in?

Osmium is in group 8 of the periodic table, also known as the iron group or 8A.


What family is osmium?

Osmium is a member of the platinum group metals family, which includes six metallic elements that are chemically similar to one another. These metals are known for their high density and resistance to corrosion.


What is the osmium number of nutrons?

The most common isotope of osmium, Os-192, has 114 neutrons. Osmium has many isotopes with varying numbers of neutrons.


Does zirconium and osmium belong to metalloids or semimetals on the periodic table?

Zirconium and osmium do not belong to metalloids or semimetals; they are both transition metals located in the d-block of the periodic table. Metalloids are elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals, while semimetals refer to elements like silicon and germanium that have properties between metals and nonmetals.