I believe it is at 1536 degrees c
Silver is a metal that has a melting point of 962 degrees.
Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point.
Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point at 3695 K, 3422 °C, 6192 °F and Mercury has the lowest metal melting point with 234.32 K, -38.83 °C, -37.89 °F.
There is no common melting point, it will vary a lot with the type of metal.
to make ferrous metal all you have to do is mix iron with a certain type of metal to make a non ferrous metal well you don't have to any metal that doesn't have iron in it is a non ferrous metal
No metal has a melting point of 32F.
The incipient melting point refers to how metal is heated. It is the point just before the metal reaches its melting point.
Silver is a metal that has a melting point of 962 degrees.
To increase the melting point of aluminium, (and treating this as a philosophical question), then hardening the 'crystal matrix' may be one approach. Surface hardening by work hardening, or perhaps by inserting nitrogen ions into the surface as is used in metal(ferrous) hardening.
Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point.
All metals have different melting points but they are all high
I believe mercury has that melting point, as it is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.
Non-ferrous.
It is supposed that hassium is a solid metal.
1. Ferrous metal 2. Non-Ferrous metal 3. Alloys
Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point at 3695 K, 3422 °C, 6192 °F and Mercury has the lowest metal melting point with 234.32 K, -38.83 °C, -37.89 °F.
There is no common melting point, it will vary a lot with the type of metal.