M.A.Padmanabha Rao's DISCOVERY 3:
On bombarding a metal such as copper with gamma rays, copper X-rays are emitted. Along with Cu X-rays two more emissions successively follow: Bharat Radiation and UV dominant optical emission. UV dominant optical emission was experimentally detected for the first time from Cu, Ag, and Mo metals when present as XRF (X-ray fluoresecent) sources of AMC2084,U.K. unprecedented at room temperature.
i think is yes
The reactivity of a metal influences its ability to displace another metal in a displacement reaction. A more reactive metal will displace a less reactive metal from its compound. For example, a more reactive metal like zinc can displace copper from copper sulfate because zinc is more reactive than copper.
think allof them do, just some of them are better conductors (like silver and copper), and some are worse.
The resistance of the copper piece will increase, while the resistance of the germanium piece will decrease as they are both cooled from room temperature to 800 K. This is because the resistivity of metals like copper generally increases with decreasing temperature, while for semiconductors like germanium, the resistivity decreases with decreasing temperature.
Copper, like most metals, is solid during room temperature.
Yes, copper is considered an active metal. It can react with various substances in its environment, such as oxygen and acids, to form compounds like copper oxide or copper sulfate.
No, copper is not a ferrous metal. Ferrous metals are those that contain iron, like steel. Copper is a non-ferrous metal.
It's copper. &Copper is metal. So yeah.
Copper Sulphate is a chemical compound w/ a chemical formula CuSO4 .
I would like to start off by saying that: Energy absorbed by metal = mass of metal x specific heat capacity of metal x change in temperature of the metal If the same amount of energy is given to all three metals, there would be the highest temperature increase in the metal with the lowest specific heat capacity. Therefore, Silver would be the answer.
The reason that copper turns green is the same reason the metal rusts, oxidization. Both metal and copper oxidize when exposed to oxygen and this is a natural process. Copper that is exposed to the outside environment is more likely to turn green and that is why copper vases and decorative pieces in gardens are often green. Copper is a metal that does not react with water (H2O), but the oxygen of the air will react slowly at room temperature to form a layer of brown-black copper oxide on copper metal which looks like green sometimes...
Metal polish like Autosol
Copper.
It might have blood in it (copper is the metal you are smelling). You should get it checked out.
copper reacts to a lot of things but does not react to some common pieces like metal
The metal used for low value coins is typically copper or a combination of copper and other metals like zinc.
i think is yes