We can conclude that the melting point of table salt is above room temperature (It's actually 801 deg C). The melting point of Mercury must be below room temperature (- 39 deg C).
The melting point oof salt is far higher then the melting point of acetone.
Mercury is liquid at room temperature, while cobalt is a solid metal. Mercury has a low melting point, allowing it to remain in a liquid state at room temperature, while cobalt's melting point is significantly higher, causing it to be a solid at room temperature.
Mercury's melting point is close to the room temperature, so it is a good indicator of temperature around room temperature.
Mercury is used in thermometers because mercury is the only liquid metal in room temperature. Hence our body temperature is observed by melting the liquid metal mercury due to our body temperature.
There is not given temperature. Mercury can be virtually any temperature just like all other substances.
Because mercury has an extremely low melting point. It is the only liquid metal at room temperature.
I believe mercury has that melting point, as it is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.
No, metal is typically solid at room temperature. Some metals have melting points below room temperature, but they would still exist as solids at room temperature unless specifically cooled below their melting point.
melting point of mercury is -38.83 celsius, under the temperature, it could turn into solid
Mercury
At mercury's own freezing temperature, the mercury can be either solid or liquid; that is the definition of "freezing temperature".
-- pure alcohol at room temperature -- mercury at room temperature -- oxygen below its boiling temperature -- iron above its melting temperature -- nitrogen below its boiling temperature -- salt above its melting temperature -- gold above its melting temperature -- any other element or compound that is not H2O, above its melting temperature and below its boiling temperature