When you get to a high enough temperature.
Between metals only Mercury is liquid at room temperature.
Between metals only Mercury is liquid at room temperature.
Between metals only mercury is liquid at room temperature.
That depends on the metal: mercury is already liquid at room temperature, gallium will melt in your hand, many alloys will melt in hot water, but other metals do have to be heated to thousands of degrees before they melt.
No, most metals are solid at room temperature, though they can all melt when heated enough.The only exception is mercury, which is liquid at room temperature.
Yes. You can melt almost all metals. You just need to find the melting point (which is the temperature at which the metal melts).
That obviously depends on the temperature. At room temperature, most metals are solid.
Different metals melt at different temperatures, from -39 deg C (mercury) to 3414 deg C (tungsten).
Yes it can 'melt' metals.
Seeing as metals are solid at room temperature (except for mercury, which is a liquid), and heating metals causes them to become liquid (melt, which is the melting point). Then the boiling point of metals is going to be extremely high.
If you mean melting... different metals and materials have different temperatures that they melt at, called their Melting Point.