A vapor is usually defined as the gaseous phase of a substance that is liquid or solid at standard temperature and pressure. Therefore, for a pure substance, a vapor is usually not at room temperature. However, low partial pressures of substances such as water in air can be maintained at room temperature in equilibrium with a condensed phase of whatever is present in vapor form.
State usually refers to whether a substance is a solid, liquid, gas or plasma.
It entirely depends on the Substance as to what state it will be in at room temperature.
All Substance's have different states due to the interactions which occur at the molecular level such as Dispersion Forces, Dipole-Dipole interactions, Hydrogen Bonding and covalent bonding.
I'm pretty sure it's a "vapour" (vapor if you're American).
liquid or solid
Gas
vapor
room temperature
ice can melt at room temperature. Anything that is liquid at room temperature would, in its frozen state, melt at room temperature. Oils, beverages and mercury - if in a frozen state - would melt when exposed to room temperature.
At normal (room) temperature gold is in solid state of matter (phase).
Assuming by "normal conditions" you mean room temperature at sea level, pure calcium would be in a solid state.
Ionic compounds are solids at room temperature whereas molecular substances as a group are variable in their states of matter - some are solids, but many are liquids or gases.
At normal room temperature, oxygen is a gas.
when in its normal state,which is at room temperature, it is a solid.
At room temperature, silicon is a solid
At room temperature francium is a solid.
room temperature
gas
ice can melt at room temperature. Anything that is liquid at room temperature would, in its frozen state, melt at room temperature. Oils, beverages and mercury - if in a frozen state - would melt when exposed to room temperature.
Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.Other substances with molecules of a similar state are indeed in a gaseous state, at room temperature. It seems that water is liquid, at room temperature, because of its large electric dipole, which causes molecules to attract each other more than is usual for molecules of that size.
Generally salts are solid at room temperature.
all substances can be in any state but at different temperatures but at room temperature yes it is a solid
The normal room temperature in the Celcius system is 20o.
It becomes a silvery white solid at room temperature.