Hi! I was wondering what your favorite material property is and favorite method of testing it?
You guys are really trying to target the hard hitting questions, huh?
Alright, here's my answer: List of materials properties. 😁
In all seriousness, I can't give a single answer, but I suppose I can narrow it down from every property ever conceived of! My answer would probably vary from day to day, but if I had to pick a single property...
I don't know, something about picking up two hunks of metal that are the exact same size and having one (aluminum, for example) be really light while the other (lets go with tungsten) is really heavy is just neat. Have you seen Galileo thermometers, where you can measure temperature based on the effect it has on the density of liquids? And it's fun to measure density the way Archimedes did it, by the displacement of water.
Honorable mentions that might replace density on any given day (though I'm not familiar with the methods of measuring all these properties, hence why some of them didn't win out!):
I'm a mechanical properties person through and through. Microhardness tests are super neat. I love seeing the little diamonds they form in a metal (Vickers is more common, but Knoop is cool too). Yield strength is a classic, measured, of course, through tensile tests. (Did you know you can measure elastic modulus through ultrasonic testing?)
The coefficient of thermal expansion. The idea that things shrink or grow based on temperature, also very neat. Supposedly the two halves of the Gateway Arch in St. Louis in the US didn't line up properly because of thermal expansion in the heat, so they had to cool it down with hoses to get the last piece in!
Conductivity. Thermal or electrical. I think about thermal conductivity every time I sit down on a park bench in the sun (is it a metal bench? wood?), and electrical conductivity... well, we all know electricity is just magic sufficiently explained, isn't it?
Speaking of magic... I'm not going to go into specifics here but, just... magnetism. Magnetic properties are wild.
Refraction. The angle of light changing as it passes through a transparent/semi-transparent material? Wild. And birefringence? Have you seen that?
Color. Yes, color can be considered an optical property (for the most part; perception matters too). And as someone with a favorite color, I enjoy it very much.
Okay, I had to cut myself off there before the list got too long! Thanks for the ask!
(Everyone else chime in! What are your favorite properties and favorite ways to measure them?)