Yes, but if you are trying to find the physical property of that example, the physical property would be malleability.
A lot of things are you looking for a certain catergory or what cause the first thing that popped in my head was gold but idk if that is what you are looking for
Tin or aluminum is malleable and can be used to make tin foil, aluminum foil, tin or aluminum cans.
The technical term for being able to be shaped with a hammer is "malleable." Metal elements are all malleable, so you can name any three of them. (gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, brass, bronze, etc.)
It softens the sheets
there is absolutely no problems with micro cotton sheets. As a matter of fact Micro Cotton branded sheets are the best sheets available worldwide.
Yes silver can be hammered into sheets.
Dryer sheets were invented in the '60's.
malleability is when metals can be flattened into thin sheets.
malleability is when metals can be flattened into thin sheets.
malleability is when metals can be flattened into thin sheets.
Flattened silver looks sort of like tin foil. Or very shiny metal sheets.
malleability is when metals can be flattened into thin sheets.
Yes. 'Tin' foil is actually flattened out sheets of Aluminium.
I can possably say an example is the process of aluminum flattened to sheets
Tree pulp that has been turned into almost a liquid and flattened out into giant sheets, cut and dried. Ground wood pulp.
Aluminium, iron (steel), zinc. Early tin cans were soldered closed - so that includes lead as an answer. this is not a good answer
Let me know? As I too have 3x uncut sheets from 1984, never opened, ready to be pull out, flattened and framed to go into a Bar or Restuarnt.
its an flattened sphere
its an flattened sphere