Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br) are the only two elements that are a liquid at standard temperature and pressure. Also Bromine is a halogen, not a metal... mercury is the only liquid metal under these conditions.
All of them. However at room temperature, only mercury, francium, caesium, gallium abd rubidium are liquid.
None are more metallic. Metallic is a way of describing a metal in general.
apparently due to another answer to a very similar question, all alkali metals are solid
C. Metals
yes they can but there are many liquids that do that
It is alkali metals
all metals can liquids at certain temperature mercury is a classical example of a liquids metal
At standard temperatures and pressures, most metals are not liquids (the exception is mercury).
chemical liquids
metals...!!
None are more metallic. Metallic is a way of describing a metal in general.
There are 2 states of matter. They are solids,liquids and gasses.
- metals have metallic bonds- metals have a high density compared to liquids- metals are generally hard
metals, metalloids and non-metals solids, liquids and gases
Metals, nonmetals and noble gases.Gases, liquids and solids.
Solid
Metals are not simply dissolved in liquids; they react with these liquids, including water.
Most non metals are usually liquids or gases at room temperature, although not specifically one or the other. It depends on the properties of the substance. Most metals are solids at room temperature, with the exception of Mercury.