Yes, water at 300c is quite warm and liquid.
Ice melts into liquid water at 0 degrees C, 32 degrees F.
There are many substances that are liquid at this temperature. The most common is water. Under normal conditions, water freezes at 0 °C and boils at 100 °C.
Yes, chloroform is a colorless liquid at room temperature. It has a boiling point of 61.2 degrees Celsius, so it would be in liquid form at 30 degrees Celsius.
At 30°C, bromine is in a liquid state. Bromine has a boiling point of 58.8°C and a melting point of -7.2°C, so at 30°C it is between these two points and exists as a liquid.
Mercury is liquid at room temperature up to 30 degrees
Liquid air is air (nitrogen, oxygen and other gases) that has been super cooled to change its phase from gas to liquid. At these temperatures, water will be solid. Water turns to ice at 0 degrees C. Nitrogen and oxygen turn to liquid (liquid air) at about -196 degrees C and -183 degrees C, respectively. Water went solid a long time ago when considering how cold these gases are as a liquid.
Bromine boils at 58-590 C and melts at -70C so at 300 C it is a fuming reddish brown liquid.
Water is liquid at 25 degrees Celsius. This is equal to 77 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature is slightly warmer than room temperature.
Water become a solid (ice).
Water is a gas (steam) at 120 degrees Celsius.
The average bath water temperature is 30 degrees C. I like my baths to be about 40 degrees C :P
The average bath water temperature is 30 degrees C. I like my baths to be about 40 degrees C :P