liquid
Mercury oxide can exist in both solid and liquid states. At room temperature, it is typically found in a solid state.
Mercury's state of matter is a liquid. Mercury is not a good conductor of heat and cinnabar is the largest natural source for mercury.
The state of mercury at ordinary temperature and pressure is liquid, but it becomes solid at -39oC and becomes vapour at 357oC.
At room temperature, the most common substances that exist in the liquid state are water, ethanol, and mercury. Water is essential for life and has a unique set of properties due to hydrogen bonding. Ethanol is a widely used solvent and is found in alcoholic beverages. Mercury is notable for being the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.
At room temperature, mercury is a shiny, silver-colored, liquid.
Mercury is the ONLY metal that is found in liquid state at room temperature. Interesting, isn't it.
Mercury oxide can exist in both solid and liquid states. At room temperature, it is typically found in a solid state.
Mercury in thermometers is in a liquid state, since mercury is liquid at room temperature.
At room temperature mercury is in a liquid state
Mercury (Hg) is a liquid at room temperature.
Mercury's state of matter is a liquid. Mercury is not a good conductor of heat and cinnabar is the largest natural source for mercury.
20 degrees Celsius is about room temperature. At room temperature, mercury is a liquid.
liquid at room temperature
At mercury's own freezing temperature, the mercury can be either solid or liquid; that is the definition of "freezing temperature".
no. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature under 1 atmosphere. And hydrogen, technically, is also a metal.
At "room temperature" - usually considered to be 68 degrees Fahrenheit - mercury is a liquid.
These would be bromine (Br) and mercury (Hg).