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Tin
no
It is the boiling point of the substance.
Some do while others do not. To be solid a substance must merely have a melting point that is above room temperature. Gallium has a melting point just above room temperature, so it is normally solid but it will melt in the palm of your hand. By contrast Tungsten has such a high melting point that not even the hottest lava from Earth's volcanoes can come close to melting it.
high melting point
Tin
hard crystilline solid high melting point soluble
The melting point of a solid is the temperature at which it changes STATE from SOLID to LIQUID. At the melting point the solid and liquid phase exist in equilibrium. The melting point of a substance depends (usually slightly) on pressure and is usually specified at STANDARDatmospheric pressure.
It Could be Boron
no
The melting point of a solid is the temperature at which it changes STATE from SOLID to LIQUID. At the melting point the solid and liquid phase exist in equilibrium. The melting point of a substance depends (usually slightly) on pressure and is usually specified at STANDARDatmospheric pressure.
That depends on the solid: ice has a very low melting point, lard and butter have low melting points, chocolate has a relatively low melting point, wax has an intermediate melting point, lead has a high melting point, iron has a very high melting point, tungsten has an extremely high melting point.
Very hard, very high melting point, poor conductor of electricity and heat, and not soluble in water.
No it is a solid. Calcium has a high melting point. Most metals (except mercury) have high melting points.
No, you cannot bend a silver using your hand because Silver is hard, dense and solid. Its sonorous and has high melting point.
At STP, neon is a gas, so its melting point is low whereas silicon is a solid, so its melting point is high
metaloid