It depends on what element or compound it is. everything has different melting and freezing points.
a low temperature will freeze the substance, a high temperature will melt or turn the substance into vapor
The only things that won't melt at high temperature are those that decompose first. For instance, wood will burn long before it melts! Many many things decompose at high temperatures before they melt. If it doesn't decompose first, everything will eventually melt.
Yes, the temperature in the room can affect how a candle burns. Extreme temperatures (very hot or very cold) can cause the candle to burn unevenly or melt too quickly. It's best to keep candles in a moderate room temperature for optimal burning.
When you heat an object up, the temperature will get warmer. For the different states of matter, a different process will happen. For a solid, if the temperature is hot enough to melt the solid, it will melt. Otherwise, it will just get warmer. If you heat a liquid up, it will evaporate ( boiling process ) , then turn to steam, which is a gas.
Most solids melt or sublime as the temperature rises. Melting is the more common effect but sublimation also happens.
It does melt.
Yes you can melt it. But you want a high temperature.
The characteristic obtained by changing the state of matter, such as the ability to melt, is called a physical property. Physical properties describe the state of a substance without changing its chemical composition. In the case of melting, the physical property is the temperature at which a solid turns into a liquid.
i believe its thesame as your body temperature that's why it melt in your mouth and pocket
Ice will melt at a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Copper's state of matter is naturally a solid. But it can melt, and boil.
It depends on the substance and not in temperature, we have gas (oxygen) we can have liquid (water, H2O) and we can have ice... that will melt