Yes, it is
No, Bromine is a Halogen
Bromine is the only liquid halogen at room temperature.
Ofcourse Bromine is a halogen becoz derived from sea H2o
Bromine is the name of the element that is a liquid halogen. Bromine has the chemical symbol Br, and it has the atomic number of 35.
The halogen found in seawater is bromine.
It is bromine. Edit: NO. It is NOT bromine. The third period halogen is chlorine (Cl). Bromine happens to be in period 4.
Bromine is on 35th position in the periodic table.It has 35 atomic number.It is a halogen.
The family name of bromine is the halogens.
yes true
Yes, it is
Bromine is a halogen element, therefore it's nonmetallic.
Sounds like bromine. (It actually is.) Bromine is also volatile. A link is provided below.Yes that is correct but say if this quest was in an exam, you wouldn't write that.The answer is Bromine because the question clearly states, at room temperature this halogen is a liquid,and on any periodic table, bromine is a different colour to the other elements showing that it is a liquid or it melts close to room temperature. Bromine, Mercury, Gallium, Ceasium and Francium are all the same colour as each other. Also, yes. Bromine is volatile.Hope this helps! :)