What are you trying to ask? Your question contains such poor grammar and sentence structure as to be practically indeciferable.
First: Mercury is a very good conductor of both heat and electricity.
Second: Metals are good conductors.
Metals also have LUSTER. They are shiny. Mercury has luster.
Metals have few (1 to 3) outer energy level electrons. Mercury has this as well.
In reactions, metals tend to lose the outer electrons and form positive ions. Again mercury has this property.
Mercury is a metal that is a good conductor of electricity. This means that it allows electric current to flow through it easily.
No. Titanium, in common with all true metals, is a good conductor or electricity.
Silver is the most conductive metal because its atoms have a high number of free electrons that can move easily, allowing electricity to flow through it with minimal resistance. This makes silver the best conductor of electricity among metals.
californium is a conductor because it is metal and can carry energy through it
Aluminum is considered a metal. It is a good conductor of electricity and heat, has metallic luster, and exhibits other typical properties of metals such as malleability and ductility.
Mercury is a conductor of electricity. It is a metal with high electrical conductivity, so it does not act as an insulator.
No because it is a good conductor of heat and electricity!
Cotton is a natural fiber and is not a conductor of electricity, whether it is wet or dry. So, cotton clothing can be considered a non-metal conductor in terms of electricity.
Mercury does well on its own. Hence the reason for mercury switches. Electrolyte solution. Every kind of metal, when squeezed, produces electricity due to sudden polarization. Mercury is a conductor of electricity, even in standard conditions.
Mercury is a metal that is a good conductor of electricity. This means that it allows electric current to flow through it easily.
Oh, what a lovely question! Mercury is a very special element - it's a conductor of electricity. Just like a happy little stream flowing through the forest, electricity can move easily through mercury. It's like nature's way of connecting things together in a beautiful, conductive dance.
Lead is a metal and is considered a good conductor of electricity. It is not a semiconductor or insulator.
Mercury is a metal and a good conductor.
No. Titanium, in common with all true metals, is a good conductor or electricity.
A slinky toy can conduct electricity because it is made of metal, which is a good conductor of electricity. When a voltage is applied to the slinky, the electrons in the metal can move freely, allowing the electricity to flow through it.
Mercury is a relatively good conductor of electricity (it used to be used in positioning switches to complete an electric circuit when the switch tipped so that enclosed mercury cam in contact with two terminals e.g. a switch on the lid of a freezer box which turned the light on when the lid was opened). Mercury is a relatively poor conductor of heat (compared to most other metals).
heat and electricity.