It's a gas
It's a gas
Carbon is a solid most of the time, but can be made into a liquid, gas, or plasma.
Carbon can exist in various forms: as a solid (such as graphite or diamond), as a liquid (molten carbon in certain conditions), and as a gas (carbon dioxide). However, carbon is not typically found in a plasma state in normal everyday conditions.
Carbon can exist in various forms including solid (graphite, diamond), liquid (molten carbon under extreme conditions), and gas (carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide).
Carbon is a solid at room temperature.
Yes because the four (yes four) stages of matter are solid, liquid, gas, and plasma and carbon dioxide is mostly in the form of a gas but also can be solid or liquid but not plasma, plasma is more like fire or lava.
When carbon monoxide (CO) is cooled, it undergoes a phase transition from a gas to a liquid at its boiling point of about -191.5°C (-312.7°F). As it cools further, it can solidify into a crystalline form known as solid carbon monoxide at approximately -205°C (-337°F). In both liquid and solid forms, carbon monoxide retains its molecular structure, but its physical properties change significantly, such as density and viscosity.
solid, liquid, gas, plasma
Carbon monoxide does not have a melting point because it is a gas at room temperature and pressure. It directly transitions from solid to gas in a process called sublimation, without passing through the liquid state.
Please rephrase your question: ' ...... from highest to lowest WHAT '
Solid
what