Black Diamond is an investment group with controlling interests in both Hines Nursery and Color Spot Nursery.
No, the color of a diamond does not affect its weight. The weight of a diamond is measured in carats, and this is based on the diamond's mass, not its color.
Assuming you are asking the color of "Carbon", most forms are black. There are three "allotropes" of Carbon: Graphite, Diamond, and Amorphous. Diamond is clear but of course quite rare.
Usually this means the diamond is natural but not the color -- it was colored to be black. Depending on the process used to color the diamond, the "color enhancement" is either permament regardless of what happens to that diamond or permanent with normal wear and tear (meaning it could lose it's black color in certain sitations - like if subjected to extreme heat).
The color orange is related to harvest and black is related to death.
It may be called diamond black, shiny black, there's no actual name.
cole is carbon in a solid form carbon is black
Yes, a black diamond is a real diamond. According to Wikipedia: "Carbonado, commonly known as the 'Black Diamond', is a natural polycrystalline diamond found in alluvial deposits in the Central African Republic and Brazil. Its natural colour is black or dark grey, and it is more porous than other diamonds."
Gold or Silver or Diamond --------------------------------- Rubies.
That depends on which form it is in. As Graphite it is a dark greyish black solid but as Diamond it is a colourless crystal.
Diamond can be colorless; but graphite, coal, carbon black are black.
"Black diamond" can refer to a rare type of diamond with a natural black color due to numerous inclusions. It can also refer to a difficult ski slope or trail that is challenging to navigate. Additionally, in popular culture, it may symbolize something dark, mysterious, or unconventional.
Even a one-carat diamond requires billions of carbon atoms to bond, and all of those atoms must be carbon to create a colorless diamond. The slightest quirk creates a colored diamond: a bit of boron makes a blue diamond; nitrogen makes a yellow diamond; natural radiation form nearby rocks trap electrons to create a green surface color; pink or red shades are thought to be due to changes to the electron structure during the voyage to the surface. However, a black diamond's color is not related to trace elements. Small inclusions of graphite and iron clusters create the "black" color. While other colored diamonds are transparent, the black diamond is typically opaque, and therefore, does not exhibit the fire and brilliance of a white diamond or transparent colored diamond. Since a black diamond necessarily has inclusions, they fracture more easily than some other gem-quality diamonds. They do not cleave as predictably as most diamonds. The difficulties involved with cutting and polishing black diamonds precludes many from becoming gem-quality, and most are declared industrial-use only. Perhaps this helps better define a black diamond ski slope, too. The snow may look white, but there can be hidden "inclusions" that make the path more difficult to navigate safely than other grades of ski slopes.