yes a coin is an element because its made out of copper gold and etc and those are some elemnts on the Periodic Table
yes a coin is an element because its made out of copper gold and etc and those are some elemnts on the Periodic Table
The element nickel shares its name with the American or Canadian 5 cent piece. This is because the coin was made out of that metal or its alloy. The element was named in 1751, by Baron Axel Fredrik Cronstedt who first isolated it. In the United States, the term "nickel" was first applied to coins in 1859.
It all depends on whether or not you're talking about the element or the coin. If the element then it also depends, like if it's a gas its not healthy to breathe and doesn't really have a smell. But if its a solid or liquid it has just a bland odorless smell as very that just basically smells like metal. But the coin and the element are two Totally different things! So don't go trying to sniff a Nickel and expect that to be what the element smells like, as the same vis versa.
A property of that element. An unstable element. A radioactive element
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Potassium is a chemical element.
Silver is element number 47 -- Ag. A pure silver coin contains the element silver, but the coin itself is not an element.
Compound
The USA refers to their 5 cent coin as a Nickel. Nickel (Ni) is an element with the atomic number 28.
Neon
copper and steel
nickel
Thomas Jefferson is represented on the United States nickel coin.
The element nickel shares its name with the American or Canadian 5 cent piece. This is because the coin was made out of that metal or its alloy. The element was named in 1751, by Baron Axel Fredrik Cronstedt who first isolated it. In the United States, the term "nickel" was first applied to coins in 1859.
according to my research bec. it is also my home work it is the element nickel.
nickel
I do'nt know
the element was copper and the new black compound formed was copper oxide.