If your torch reaches 1064C you can, but if the torch can't get that hot then you cannot.
Melt it.
no but it will melt.
No, thousands of degrees of heat are required to melt gold. A regular stovetop cannot melt gold. Gold melts at about 1064 degrees Celsius (1948 Fahrenheit). While a regular stovetop won't get that hot, there are tabletop smelters that will go above two thousand degrees Fahrenheit. Part of the issue is that gold can be softened at temperatures quite a bit lower than it's melting point, similar to butter, but not really. So mostly it depends what you're trying to do.
Melt it!
If gold gets hot enough, it will melt. What type of change is this?
Gold will not burn, however if the fire is hot it will melt.
If your torch reaches 1064C you can, but if the torch can't get that hot then you cannot.
Miners do not and are not allowed to melt gold into money.
No gold can not melt in your hand. it it physically impossable No gold does not melt in your hand, it is a solid and a metal and its melting point is 1064.43 degrees Celisius or 1948 degrees Fahernheit. This is hardly a temperature taht could be acheived by your body.
Melt it.
However hot it takes to melt a rock.
A dool will not melt.
An ice cube will melt faster in hot water.
yes you can but it melts the butter
Magma would likely contains trace amounts of gold, not nearly enough to be worth trying to extract. However, in areas of magmatic activity, gold is sometimes deposited in veins by the resulting hydrothermal processes.
At what degree do you melt gold