They posses metallic lusture
No. Graphite is a form of carbon, and iodine is a halogen, and both carbon and iodine are nonmetals.
Iodine and graphite are two nonmetals that can exhibit a lustrous appearance under certain conditions.
oxygen-breathing iodine-salt graphite-pencil sulphur-matches
At room temperature and pressure, carbon (in the form of graphite and diamond) and sulfur are solid nonmetals. However, these elements can exhibit different physical states under varying conditions of temperature and pressure.
It is a characteristic or you can say, property of metalsthat - they are LUSTROUS in nature whereas on the other hand, non-metals possess the property that - they are NON - LUSTROUS in nature.Thus, metals can be lustrous and non-metals cannot be lustrous in nature(except iodine, which is a non-metal, but is lustrous in nature).
there are no elements which show exact properties but... 1) Luster : Graphite and iodine 2) Liquid metals : Bromine, Mercury 3) Thermal conductivity : Diamond 4) Electric " " : Graphite 5) Non metals which are hard : Graphite and Diamond
Not necessarily. Nonmetals can exist in different states of matter at room temperature, including solid, liquid, or gas, depending on their specific properties. Examples of nonmetals that are solid at room temperature include sulfur and carbon in the form of graphite.
Fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine. All of the elements in the halogen family are nonmetals.
mostly all nonmetals such as oxygen, sulfur, chlorine, bromine, fluorine, iodine, phosphorus, etc
Nonmetals are sulfur, carbon, helium, nitrogen, argon, selenium, radon, bromine, iodine, fluorine, etc.
name a non-metal which is in the solid state?
No, nonmetals are not invisible. Nonmetals such as oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon are visible in their gaseous form as they make up the air we breathe. Other nonmetals like sulfur and iodine can be seen in their solid or liquid forms.