We all know that glass at STP is a very very slow moving LIQUID.
When I recently asked a teacher of mine whet the melting point was he gave
me an answer that was well above room temperature. When heard this I was
shocked and I was told to find out what the melting point was since "I
knew everything." I think the melting point is somewhere around 100 Kelvin.
If some one would be kind enough to shed some light on the actual temperature
I would be very grateful.
yours truly,
"lost"
liquid, a very slow moving one though.
At room temperature, carbon is a solid.
Carbon is a solid at room temperature.
Polonium is a solid, man-made, radioactive poor metal.
At room temperature, polonium is a solid. However, at elevated temperatures, it may be turned into a liquid or even a gas (at very high temperatures). Polonium is a metalloid, having properties between metals and nonmetals.
Heat flows from the water to the ice.
It is not possible. You call the substance a solid if it is so at room temperature. It is not possible for a solid (at room temperature) to also be as a liquid at room temperature.
Sucrose can be both solid or liquid. At room temperature, however, it's a solid.
It depends on the temperature. For instance, Mercury is a liquid at room temperature. Gold is solid at room temperature.
Yes, at room temperature and pressure calcium is a solid.
it is a solid at room temperature
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
Titanium is a solid at room temperature.
Calcium is a solid in room temperature
propanone is liquid at room temperature
At room temperature, sulfur is a solid.Yellow solid in room temperature.
Germanium is a solid at room temperature.
Sodium is a solid at room temperature.