No
Iodine is a halogen whose crystals sublime. When iodine is heated, it changes directly from a solid to a gaseous state without passing through a liquid phase.
Bromine is the only liquid halogen at room temperature.
Nonmetals can be solid, liquid or gaseous.
Yes, all of them.
Bromine is a liquid nonmetal halogen in the fourth period of the periodic table. It is the only halogen that exists in a liquid state at room temperature.
The change in state would be known as melting. Just for your information: Solid to Liquid = Melting Liquid to Gaseous = Boiling Solid to Gaseous = Sublimation Gaseous to Liquid = Condensation Liquid to Solid = Freezing Gaseous to Solid = Deposition
Bromine is the name of the element that is a liquid halogen. Bromine has the chemical symbol Br, and it has the atomic number of 35.
From solid to liquid, from liquid to gaseous, from gaseous to liquid, from liquid to solid, and in sublimation from solid to gaseous or the reverse, chemical properties do not change.
solid = ice liquid = water gaseous = water vapour
Bromine (Br) is a liquid at room temperature. It has a Melting Point of -7.3C and Boiling Point of 58.78C.
No. Liquid oxygen and gaseous oxygen are the same substance, just in different states.
Water condenses from a gaseous to a liquid form at 100 degrees Celsius.