Clearly, this depends on the temperature of the room. In most countries, cooking oil will be liquid at room temperature. However in very cold countries, cooking oil will be solid at room temperature.
If it's saturated then it will be solid. If it's unsaturated then it will be liquid.
Olive oil is a liquid at room temperature.
47 centistokes.
Olive oil is liquid at room temperature.
liquid
liquid
liquid
Don't they all exist in the three states of matter? Depending on the temperature...
There are 2 states of matter. They are solids,liquids and gasses.
At "room temperature" - usually considered to be 68 degrees Fahrenheit - mercury is a liquid.
At room temperature and pressure, fluorine and chlorine are gases, bromine is liquid and iodine is a solid
Technology and science can not exist without knowledge of material properties.
Titanium's state of matter at standard temperature and pressure is solid, as seen from its description in the Periodic Table, but all states of matter does exist for titanium under certain conditions. Thus, titanium can be a liquid or a gas, or be in a indistinguishable phase of plasma.
The same substance can exist either as a solid, liquid or a gas and can change state depending on the temperature or external pressure.
Flerovium is predicted to be a solid metal. But a total certainty about the state of matter of flerovium at room temperature doesn't exist now.
Bromine is in its liquid state of matter at room temperature.
how temperature can bring about changes in the state of matter
If it were a solid at room temperature, then that would be the state of matter. However, hydrogen is NOT solid at room temperature. It is a gas and that would be the state of matter.
the state of matter at room temperature for the element Europium is a liquid.