If you're talking about water it can be either at zero deg C.
Aluminium is a solid at this temeperature.
Yes, water can exist in liquid form at 0 degrees Celsius under normal atmospheric pressure. However, it will freeze into a solid state (ice) if the temperature drops below 0 degrees Celsius.
The melting point of a solid is the same as the freezing point of a liquid. For example, water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 Celsius), so ice would melt at 32 degrees Fahrenheit( 0 Celsius).
The melting temperature of a substance is dependent upon the pressure and specific volume. The melting temperature of liquid at standard pressure of 1atm (~100kPa) is 0 degrees Celsius.
Water freezes and becomes a solid at 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
Water is a solid when it's 0 degrees Celsius or lower and a liquid at 0 degrees Celsius or higher and when it is 100 degrees Celsius it turns in to a gas
Water changes state from liquid to solid when it reaches a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a simple example of changing from liquid to solid, or freezing.
80cal/g
Aluminium is a solid at this temeperature.
It depends on the solid. Solid ice turns to liquid water at 0 degrees Celsius. Solid Tungsten doesn't turn to liquid until it's over 3000 degrees Celsius.
32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees celsius
Solid ice starts to turn to liquid water a 0 degrees Celsius.
0 oC
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.
Liquid turns into solid when it reaches its freezing point. Example- the freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius.
Chlorine is a solid at 0 degrees celsius because it's also a solid at 25 degrees celsius.
Depends on what substance. For example, Ice which is a solid, liquifies above 0 degrees Celsius