No metal has a melting point of 32F.
The lowest melting point is of course - 39 0C.
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.
A thermometer can be used to check the purity of a metal by measuring its melting or freezing point. Impurities in a metal can alter its melting point, so a pure metal should have a specific and consistent melting point. By comparing the measured melting point with the known melting point of the pure metal, the level of purity can be evaluated.
That depends on the metal. Mercury is liquid at room temperature (melting point -39° C) Tin has a melting point of a few hundred degrees (melting point 232° C) Titanium melts at over a thousand degrees (melting point - 1668° C) Tungsten with the highest melting point of the metal elements melts at 3422 °C
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.
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.
The melting point of lead is at 327,46 oC.
Mercury
2539 degrees