Oxygen is about 1/4 of the air that we breathe. It's a gas at ordinary temperatures and pressures.
its a gas
gas
Oxygen can be a solid, liquid, or gas, depending on the temperature and pressure and on what other elements it is bound to in a chemical compound. Free molecular oxygen, as found in the Earth's atmosphere, is a gas. Oxygen bound with hydrogen in the Earth's oceans is a liquid. Oxygen bound with iron in iron oxide (rust) is a solid.
gas liquid and solid
Oxygen can be a solid, liquid, or gas, depending on the temperature and pressure and on what other elements it is bound to in a chemical compound. Free molecular oxygen, as found in the Earth's atmosphere, is a gas. Oxygen bound with hydrogen in the Earth's oceans is a liquid. Oxygen bound with iron in iron oxide (rust) is a solid.
Oxygen is usally a Gas. It can be liquified if cooled past its boiling point. And it can become a solid if cooled past its melting point. Oxygen can be in all three states but is usally in the state of Gas.
Air is a mixture of gases, which includes nitrogen, oxygen, and smaller amounts of other gases. It is not a solid or a liquid.
At room temperature, oxygen is a gas.
Ice is a solid. water is a liquid. and oxygen is a gas
Solid.
The answer is trivial. Some are solid, some liquid and some are gas. The solid ones are those (that at normal conditions) are not liquid (such as mercury) nor a gas (such as oxygen).
Oxygen is a gas at room temperature and pressure, so it does not have a solid or liquid texture. In its solid form, oxygen is a pale blue crystalline solid called dry ice or solid oxygen. In its liquid form, oxygen is a pale blue liquid.