to dull or shine the lust of metal im not 100% sure
By forming their oxides, the alkali metals tarnish very quickly with respect to many other metals.
No, helium does not rust or tarnish because it is an inert gas. Inert gases like helium do not readily react with other elements or compounds to form rust or tarnish.
Tarnish is to silver as rust is to iron. Tarnish is a layer of corrosion that forms on silver when it reacts with sulfur-containing compounds, while rust is the result of iron reacting with oxygen and moisture.
It is a chemical change. Oxygen from the air combined chemically with the silver to form silver oxide- that is the tarnish.
chemical, because when a penny is tarnished its a chemical change because, its weathered down its destroyed. The tarnish itself is usually either the oxide and/or sulfide of the underlying metal.
Chemical.
No, it's a chemical property.
By forming their oxides, the alkali metals tarnish very quickly with respect to many other metals.
The ability to tarnish is a chemical property. Tarnishing occurs when a substance undergoes a chemical reaction with other compounds in its environment, leading to the formation of a different substance on its surface.
It's a chemical change because a new substance comes out of tarnishing.
Tarnish.
Tarnishing is a chemical change as it involves a reaction between the metal and substances in the environment, leading to the formation of a new compound on the metal surface. This new compound is often a metal oxide or sulfide, which gives the tarnished appearance.
No, gold does not tarnish.
i think the tarnish will come of the tarnish penny
Another word for tarnish is destroy.
No, helium does not rust or tarnish because it is an inert gas. Inert gases like helium do not readily react with other elements or compounds to form rust or tarnish.
I believe it is .925 silver with a platinum coating to retard tarnish.