are you high
because i know i sure am
A color of a penny as it was made of copper.
It's aged copper so it's like a penny that's why the statue of liberty is green
The outside skin of the Statue of Liberty is made of copper. When it was first made it was the color of a penny. Over time the copper reacts with the water in the air to formal compounds that are green-blue in color.
No, the green color on a penny comes from oxidation of the copper in the coin, while the Statue of Liberty turned green due to the natural weathering of the copper material it is made of over time. Different mechanisms are at play in these two situations.
The Statue of Liberty is made of copper supported by an iron skeleton. "179,200 pounds (81,300 kilograms) of copper was used in Statue. 250,000 pounds (113,400 kilograms) of iron. Total weight of the Statue is 450,000 pounds (225 tons). The thickness of Copper sheeting is 3/32 inch (2.37mm), about the thickness of a penny. "
A Statue with broken chains
Copper is a brown solid. Take a look at an American or Canadian penny. In nature, copper is usually found as an oxide that is bluish green. The Statue of Liberty is copper and has oxidized to this bluish green color.
The Statue of Liberty is made of pure copper hung on a framework of steel, which was originally puddled iron. Her flame above the torch is coated in gold leaf, which was originally made of copper and later altered to hold glass panes. The copper is 3/32 of an inch thick, that's just a bit thinner than two pennies. The copper's green color is a layer of patina that forms with age (extended periods of oxidization). Like a really old penny would appear if not stored properly. The color of the Statue of Liberty before patination was a shiny reddish brown color. .
No, a copper penny and a large copper bell cannot have the same density because their sizes and shapes are different. Density is defined as mass divided by volume, so even though they are made of the same material (copper), the penny and the bell have different masses and volumes, resulting in different densities.
Oxidation is what is seen in on Lady Liberty. If you want to be even more specific, the color of Lady Liberty is verdigris. Other cases of oxidation can be seen if you look at pennies in a wishing well.
Pennies are made of zinc plated with copper. Copper reacts with oxygen and water to form copper oxide. This is the tarnish you see on pennies that have been in damp conditions. The only U.S. coins that can truly rust are the 1943 zinc coated steel cents.
At first the french gave the statue of liberty to New York! When it first arrivedit was copper but it oxidized and turned green. If you have ever seen a green penny, that's an example.