That depends on the composition of the penny. US pennies made before 1982 are mostly copper, and thus melt at a temperature of about 1981 °F. Pennies made after 1982 are mostly zinc, and will melt at about 787 °F.
It depends what metal you're melting. A good website that tells you a metal and its melting temperature is in the related links section below.
Examples in degrees celsius are;
Lead-327.5 C
Aluminium-660 C
Gold-550.5 C
Copper-1084 C
Nickel-1453 C
Iron-1535 C.
That depends a lot on the metal or alloy out of which the coin is made. Different metals have been used, and are currently used, for different coins.
Its variable, depends on what kind of metal you are refering to.
That depends on the coin. A copper coin will melt at a different temperature than a nickel coin.
The penny is a copper plated steel coin.
The melting point of pure copper is 1084,62 0C.
The melting point of a low alloy steel is cca. 1450 0C.
2030degrees celsius
9 celices
the melting point is 1652
500 degrees Celsius
The metal manganese is a solid at room temperature, and does not melt until 1250 degrees C.
well it freezes at 0c or 32f so it will melt if subjected to a higher temperature
Don't confuse the process of melting, which is caused by heat, with the process of dissolving, which is caused by solvents such as acid. Acid can dissolve metal, but it does not melt metal.
the melting point is 1652
The metal will melt if you do that.
Between metals only Mercury is liquid at room temperature.
500 degrees Celsius
assuming the same temperature metal is better at distributing energy so metal.
Between metals only mercury is liquid at room temperature.
All metals melt at high temperature... the metal that doesn't melt is mercury as it is already liquid at room temperature..... There is no metal that undergoes sublimation unlike non-metals.
Yes. You can melt almost all metals. You just need to find the melting point (which is the temperature at which the metal melts).
The metal manganese is a solid at room temperature, and does not melt until 1250 degrees C.
Different metals melt at different temperatures, from -39 deg C (mercury) to 3414 deg C (tungsten).
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature. Francium, Cesium, Gallium, and Rubidium become liquids slightly above room temperature, meaning you could watch them melt in your hand! Every other metal, however, is a solid at room temperature.
all metal can melt