No. The boiling point is higher temp. than the melting point. When something is melted, it becomes liquid: when something is boiled, it begins to become vapor.
No. The melting and boiling points of liquids vary considerably.
Boiling point is most affected by pressure. Note that freezing point and melting point are in fact the same.
they are the same... dont know who wrote this but it can be the same such as dry ice, or different such as water. however boiling point will sometimes be higher than melting point
Melting point -111.7C Boiling point -108.12C
The melting point is 1220.58F. The boiling point is 4566F.
what is the melting point and boiling point of substance
Boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid is in equilibrium with the gas phase of the same liquid. Melting point is the temperature at which a solid becomes a liquid (i.e. the point at which a solid and liquid of the same substance will be in equilibrium)
NO!!! Boiling point is the temperature when a liquid changes to a gas. Melting point is the temperature when a solid changes to a liquid. Remember For rising temperatures It melts then boils For falling temperatures It condenses then freezes. Melting/Freezing point is the same temperature for change of state solid/liquid Boiling/Condensing point is the same temperature for change of state liquid/gas
If the temperature is below the melting point, you know it is in the solid state. If the temperature is below the boiling point, and above the melting point, you know it is a liquid. If the temperature is above the boiling point, you know it is a gas, etc. (Note: melting point is the same as freezing point).
melting point: 3422 C Boiling point: 5660 C
The boiling point of Yttrium is 3609 K (3336oC or 6037oF). (3336 °C, 6037 °F)
The melting point of Calcium is 839℃ and the boiling point is 1484℃.