There are many more than three elements that are solid under standard conditions.
The solid stete is common for metals butthere are exceptions also. Like mercury which is liquid at room temperature
Examples: argon, nitrogen.
Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine are all diatomic in their natural states.
All the solids change the physical state (from solid to liquid or gas, crystallization structure, etc.) or the chemical state by heating.
Basically every thing in the universe that you can see is an element in its natural state. They're only purified in laboratories under rigorously controlled conditions.
The solid stete is common for metals butthere are exceptions also. Like mercury which is liquid at room temperature
Elements can either be synthetic or natural. Synthetic elements are made artificially in laboratories, while natural elements exist in their natural state in nature. Natural elements can further be defined as native elements. These elements exist in their uncombined state.
in solids i think
Solids other than mercury.
in its pure natural state uncombined with other elements, bromine is a LIQUID...
It depends which elements you are talking about. Some would exist as solids at this temperature while others would be gases or liquids.
The liquid elements in periodic table are only 2 , Mercury and Bromine, gaseous elements are 11, Hydrogen, Nitrogen , Oxygen, Fluorine , Chlorine and six Noble gases all other elements are solids.
All except H, He, O, N, F, Ne, Cl, Ar (Gallium is JUST solid at Room Temp), Br, Kr, Xe, Rn, Hg
Gas is a natural state of matter and has been around for billions of years, as have fluids and solids, so gas was not "invented".
Examples: argon, nitrogen.
Like most elements, calcium is a solid.
Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine are all diatomic in their natural states.