No; however, silver is used to make mirrors.
silver is used in making mirrors because silver has a property to reflect so it is used in making mirrors
A glass is made of glass.A glass is a single object used for drinking liquid. The article "a" before glass tells us we are talking about a single object.Whereas glass (no 'a') is a material that is used to make different objects eg a mirror, a window, a vessel to hold water etc
a mineral used to make Glass, rocket proppellants idk what you need that for but thats what you can make it out of, you can also make batteries, and medicine Hope this helps! :)
Silica sand is the major component of glass (quartz).
sand makes glass and glass make sand its a reverse psychology :)
Silver makes the glass change color over time.
Yes. The iridescent effect that makes glass appear to be different colors from different viewing angles is called dichroic glass. The effect is accomplished by the application of thin layers of silver or gold to the surface of the glass and coating that with another thin glass layer.
Faience, gold, glass, silver, bone, ivory, wood etc.
Gold or silver or gemstones or platinum or glass or plastic - all used at times to make jewellery.
The element that is used to make pink glass is selenium. This element is also used to make glass that is red in coloring.
silver is used in making mirrors because silver has a property to reflect so it is used in making mirrors
Aluminum, Glass, Plastic, Steel, Copper, Silicon, Gold, Nickel, Silver and other trace elements.
What looks silver in a glass thermometer is actually mercury, which is toxic.
Silver has a lower coefficient of thermal expansion compared to the glass in a thermometer. This means that as temperature changes, silver would not expand or contract at the same rate as the glass, leading to inaccurate temperature readings. Additionally, silver could react with substances in the thermometer and corrode over time, affecting its durability and performance.
There are three basic ingredients in film: silver halides (some combination of silver iodide, silver chloride and silver bromide) to make the film sensitive to light gelatin, to bond the silver halides to the backing material a backing material, which is usually a polyester film but it can be glass. (Cameras on really big telescopes used glass plates because they don't sag in the middle.)
because the glass used to make a mirror is green but then covered in a layer of silver therefore when you look down a mirror tunnel it will get dimmer and greener revealing the green glass behind the paint.
Silver is used for all these. Gold could be, but silver is more likely to be used in electrical circuits and for mirrors.