At room temperature plutonium is a solid metal.
Plutonium is normally solid and metallic.
Plutonium is an unstable, radioactive metal, and it is a solid any anything around room temperature. It won't be a liquid or gas. If the question is aimed at which allotrope of (refined) plutonium is normal, it could be alpha phase. This could be inferred from the phase diagram. But plutonium makes transitions so easily between phases, and because the mechanism behind allotropic phase transition in plutonium is not clearly understood, this may not be entirely true. Certainly according to the phase diagram, it should be alpha, but tell that to the engineers and machinists who shape it to make weapons. It is usually alloyed with a bit of gallium to stabilize it in delta phase. Links are provided to relevant articles posted by our friends at Wikipedia, where knowledge is free.
The normal phase for platinum is solid. At room temperature, platinum is a solid.
it is a solid at room tempretureGallium is a solid metal, but only under 30 0C.
BTW, it's a solid, normal phase means state of matter
Sodium is a solid at room temperature and pressure, making it in the solid phase normally.
The normal phase for boron is solid at room temperature.
the word phase also means its state so in that case germanium's normal phase or state is solid the word phase also means its state so in that case germanium's normal phase or state is solid the word phase also means its state so in that case germanium's normal phase or state is solid
At room temperature scandium is a solid metal.
The normal phase of Silicon is solid.
Plutonium is a solid at room temperature. It has a high melting point of 639.4°C and boiling point of 3,228°C, which means it remains solid under normal conditions.
Actually the normal phase of calcium is a SOLID.