On the Periodic Table elements are shown in their state of matter at room temperature (About 68 degrees) Edit (by AY12345): Actually room temperature is exactly 25 degrees C, so that's actually 77 degrees F, not 68 The room temperature is not like what it says on a thermostat. This room temperature is the temperature scientists use to make STANDARD measurements.
Color of atomic symbol. The gasses are mostly on the right side of the table (N, O, F, CL, Rn, Xe, Kr, Ar, Ne, He) except for H. There are only two liquids, Hg and Br. The rest of the elements are solid at room temperature, except the actinides series that are mostly synthetic (man-made).
three states. solid, liquid and gas
Elements are found on the periodic table.
wave state and dark matter state
No. Table salt (or any salt for that matter) is an ionic compound.
It is a noble gas, which are in group 18 (far right column of the periodic table). It is in period (row) 4. It is element 36. Its abbreviation is Kr.
The state of matter the Earth's crust is in is solid.
The Periodic Table of elements
this is considered to be a hard question to answer. I'm sorry.
it goes from gas to solid
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.
Titanium's state of matter at standard temperature and pressure is solid, as seen from its description in the Periodic Table, but all states of matter does exist for titanium under certain conditions. Thus, titanium can be a liquid or a gas, or be in a indistinguishable phase of plasma.
yes
A state table defines the behaviour of the of the sequantial function
1st state of matter- solid 2nd state of matter- liquid 3rd state of matter- gas 4th state of matter- plasma 5th state of matter- Bose Einstein condensate 6th state of matter - fermionic condensate 7th state of matter- thought to be Fermionic condensate
Elements are found on the periodic table.
ammonium is in the state of matter
Neptunium is a metal element. It is a solid in room temperature. It is in the f block of the Periodic Table.
No, The state of matter only affects its' concentration. No matter what state matter is in, it will always have the same mass (assuming it doesn't drip or float away). However, the state of matter can affect the area or volume of matter.