Yes, it will remain a liquid at that temperature.
Mercury
No, it will not. Furthermore, a freezer operating at 50 deg C is a totally pointless piece of equipment.
No, it does not.
No it does not.
At 50 degrees Celsius, water is liquid. It boils and becomes gas at 100 degrees Celsius, and freezes and becomes solid at 0 degrees Celsius.
Mercury
It would be at -50 deg C.
No, it will not. Furthermore, a freezer operating at 50 deg C is a totally pointless piece of equipment.
No, it does not.
No it does not.
Yes, 50 degrees Celsius is equal to a temperature of 122 degrees Fahrenheit.
At 50 degrees Celsius, water is liquid. It boils and becomes gas at 100 degrees Celsius, and freezes and becomes solid at 0 degrees Celsius.
Francium is a liquid at 50 0C.
Yes, When I first Asked This Question on 11/15/12 I Just Couldn't Figure It Out But Then I found Out The Answer of "suppose these substances were placed in the freezer set to -50`c. Which substance would become a liquid?" The answer was tungsten!
The three states of matter are solid, liquid, and gas.Water at 50 degrees Celsius and standard pressure is a liquid.50 degrees Celsius is 32 + (9/5) times 50 = 122 degrees Fahrenheit. liquid liquid
50 celsius Hotter on Celsius Scale
50 celsius Hotter on Celsius Scale