Silverware has lots of it. Can anyone help me with a science project.
add. Coins, photographic film, disinfectants, electrical contacts.
Have a crack at silver in wikipedia.
Gold is always going to be heavier than silver, its the amount of it in the ring that will determine the weight.
It's easy! Pennies were never made of silver. They would be worth way more than a cent. Steel pennies were made in 1943. So if you have a penny that was minted in 1943 it's not silver but rather steel.
Not necessarily. The mass of an object is determined by its volume and the density of the material it is made of. While iron is denser than aluminum, an object made of aluminum can still be more massive if it has a larger volume compared to an object made of iron.
Yes, gold is more dense than silver. Gold has a density of 19.32 g/cm3 while silver has a density of 10.49 g/cm3.
Tricky question. If the surfaces are the same, then silver will absorb more, but in the case of a silver mirror, it will reflect more light, so the white will absorb more. Save
Silver dimes (made up till 1964) contain 0.07234 troy ounces of silver. Silver nickels (only made mid-1942 to 1945) contain .05626 troy ounces of silver. Silver dimes are worth more because they have more silver in them.
Quarters were never made of sterling silver. It's too soft. They were made out of coin silver, which has more copper in it, until 1964.
3 cents. It's an ordinary penny that was plated. The US has never made silver cents. Among other things they would have been worth more than dimes!
There were no silver dollars minted from 1936 through 1970. There wasn't a need for more to be made.
silver because sterling silver is 92.5% silver and the purer it is, the more it is worth.
white gold will be able to hold up to more punishment that regular silver.
Both.
It made silver worth more than gold
Silver is used for: -Jewelry -Money -Keys -Designs and much more when i think
Gold is always going to be heavier than silver, its the amount of it in the ring that will determine the weight.
A collection of terms with one or more things in common.
Does this list make his argument more or less convincing? Why?