liquid
It depends on the temperature. For instance, Mercury is a liquid at room temperature. Gold is solid at room temperature.
No, mercury is a liquid at room temperature.
At STP ( Room Temperature) there are only two elements that are liquids. They are Mercury(Hg) and Bromine(Br) / Mercury also goes by the names 'Quicksilver' and more formally, 'hydragyrum (Hg). Cobalt (Co) is a solid metal at STP. NB Do NOT confuse the elemental symbol for cobalt (Co) with Carbon Monoxide (CO) , The difference is the lowercase/capital 'o/O'.
mercury (its a liquid at room temperature)
no. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature under 1 atmosphere. And hydrogen, technically, is also a metal.
At room temperature mercury is a liquid.
The only metal that is not solid at room temperature is mercury. Mercury is a liquid metal at room temperature and is the only metal that exists in liquid form under normal conditions.
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 answer is: metals.
Yes. If you are talking about the thing in thermometers, yes, they are liquid.(metal- liquid) Mercury is one of the few metals that is a liquid at room temperature. Other metals, as you know, are solid at room temperature.
Mercury is a liquid at room temperature and pressure. It has a melting point of -38.83°C and a boiling point of 356.73°C.