Mercury is Classified as a Metal in the periodic Table, however it is liquid at room TemperatureMercury is not solid at room temperature.mercury is liquid at room temperatureWell, of the elements there are a few, actually.mercury, melting point −38.72 °Cfrancium, melting point 27 °Ccesium, melting point 28.55 °Cgallium, melting point 29.76 °C... hotter than that, and it is not a room I would want to spend much time in. Rubidium, potassium, and sodium all melt below the boiling point of water.Alloys of low-melting point elements melt at room temperature or below.mercury
The state of matter of a substance at room temperature depends on whether the melting and boiling points are above or below room temperature. At room temperature:A substance is solid if both the melting and boiling points are above room temperature.A substance is liquid if the melting point is below room temperature but the boiling point is above room temperature.A substance is a gas if both the melting point and boiling point are below room temperature.
Because mercury has an extremely low melting point. It is the only liquid metal at room temperature.
At room temperature uranium is a solid metal, not hot; the melting point of uranium is 1 132,2 0C.
i think is yes
I believe mercury has that melting point, as it is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.
Check the melting point of the substance. If the melting point is below room temperature, then the substance is liquid and if the melting point is above room temperature then it is solid.
Mercury is Classified as a Metal in the periodic Table, however it is liquid at room TemperatureMercury is not solid at room temperature.mercury is liquid at room temperatureWell, of the elements there are a few, actually.mercury, melting point −38.72 °Cfrancium, melting point 27 °Ccesium, melting point 28.55 °Cgallium, melting point 29.76 °C... hotter than that, and it is not a room I would want to spend much time in. Rubidium, potassium, and sodium all melt below the boiling point of water.Alloys of low-melting point elements melt at room temperature or below.mercury
No, platinum has a high melting point. Its melting point is 1,772°C
The state of matter of a substance at room temperature depends on whether the melting and boiling points are above or below room temperature. At room temperature:A substance is solid if both the melting and boiling points are above room temperature.A substance is liquid if the melting point is below room temperature but the boiling point is above room temperature.A substance is a gas if both the melting point and boiling point are below room temperature.
This temperature is called melting point.
Because mercury has an extremely low melting point. It is the only liquid metal at room temperature.
That depends on the metal. Mercury is liquid at room temperature (melting point -39° C) Tin has a melting point of a few hundred degrees (melting point 232° C) Titanium melts at over a thousand degrees (melting point - 1668° C) Tungsten with the highest melting point of the metal elements melts at 3422 °C
Technetium is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature uranium is a solid metal, not hot; the melting point of uranium is 1 132,2 0C.
It is Mercury and though silvery in appearance is NOT silver (also a metal but with a fairly high melting-point).
No, gallium is a solid metal, though it does have a low melting point. The only liquid nonmetal at room temperature is bromine.