The Picard ManeuverM to Lemmy [email protected] • 2 months agoThe grand prizelemmy.worldmessage-square138fedilinkarrow-up1945
arrow-up1945imageThe grand prizelemmy.worldThe Picard ManeuverM to Lemmy [email protected] • 2 months agomessage-square138fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish24•2 months agoIt sinks. Tungsten isn’t reactive with water, it’s not an alkali metal. Sodium, lithium, potassium etc (alkali metals) would react violently with water though.
minus-squareatro_citylinkfedilink6•2 months agoI was remembering it wrong. Oops. In chemistry class, we had a professor who put a cube of some material into water and it skidded along the surface making very angry noises. Can’t remember which element that was.
minus-squareivanafterall ☑️linkfedilinkEnglish10•2 months agoGood luck retrieving your giant tungsten payday from the murky depths now.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•2 months agoA frankium cube that big would be neat. Only downside is, that half of it is decayed after like 7 Minutes(if I remember correctly)
It sinks.
Tungsten isn’t reactive with water, it’s not an alkali metal.
Sodium, lithium, potassium etc (alkali metals) would react violently with water though.
I was remembering it wrong. Oops. In chemistry class, we had a professor who put a cube of some material into water and it skidded along the surface making very angry noises. Can’t remember which element that was.
Good luck retrieving your giant tungsten payday from the murky depths now.
Probably Potassium
K
Catmium
Most likely sodium, maybe potassium
A frankium cube that big would be neat. Only downside is, that half of it is decayed after like 7 Minutes(if I remember correctly)