if we could produce some (in metal form), it would be hydrogen. There might be solid hydrogen inside black holes, and perhaps inside stars, but you can only have some under tremendous pressures... But if you could get some, it would be the densest metal in the universe...
Otherwise, try something like uranium... It very dense! (take a metal with a high atomic number)
2006-08-14 01:30:58
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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just a joke...
nobody knows. we haven't completely explored the universe yet, right? that being the case, how would we know what is the densist metal in the whole universe? i guess you should have just asked for the dentist metal here on earth. =)
2006-08-15 09:51:28
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answer #2
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answered by Aris 2
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I have 8 sheets of a very dense metal that I bought at a government auction. I can't remember the name of the stuff but it's so dense that it's the metal used for lenses for the explosive charges on nuclear devices and it's so dense that electrons can't pass through it.
It's strange stuff... heavy for it's size and nearly indestrutable.
2006-08-14 05:33:03
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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any metal in blackhole would be in the same density. Why? Because blackhole (or even a black dwarf, a very old, cold star) attracts mass in such way that there would be no more room to get denser thus all elements in the periodic table would be as dense as anything.
2006-08-14 02:02:03
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answer #4
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answered by Lie Ryan 6
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Adamantium
2006-08-14 01:21:37
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Foolish Foolish Foolish people, its mercury......duh if you had a gigantic bath (that could hold the earth) and filled it with mercury the earth would float.
suck on that.....uh hu....but be careful if you experiment coz itys extremely pisonous.
2006-08-14 01:57:30
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answer #6
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answered by Elleni S 1
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It's osmium - 22.62 g/cm3 compared to mercury which is around 13 g/cm3 and water which is 1g/cm3
2006-08-14 19:34:39
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answer #7
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answered by Anirudh 2
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Iridium, density 22.65 gcm^3.
2006-08-14 01:30:31
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answer #8
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answered by Auriga 5
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