melting temperature is when something melt in that time what is the temperature of it.
Melting point: the temperature at which a solid become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature at which a liquid become a gas.
If the temperature is below the melting point then the element is a solid.If the temperature is above the melting point but below the boiling point, then the element is a liquid.If the temperature is above the boiling point, then the element is a gas.
NO!!! However, on change of physical state;- solid to liquid it is 'melting' liquid to solid it is 'freezing' Similarly liquid to gas it is evaporation/boiling gas to liquid it is condensation. Different substances have different temperature for change of physical state. Water being the scientific standard has; - melting/freezing at 0oC boiling/evaporation at 100oC
No, different liquids have different boiling and melting points depending on their chemical composition. The boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid turns into a gas, while the melting point is the temperature at which a solid turns into a liquid. Each liquid has its own unique set of physical properties that determine its specific boiling and melting points.
They have low melting points and high reactivity.
The temperature at which something melts, what that is depends on substance in question.
All substances have a melting point.Water, for example, has a melting point. It is simply the temperature at which a substance changes states to a liquid.
yes, for the same molecule. However, some substances don't have a liquid phase and so the melting point is exactly the same as the boiling point at normal pressures (sublimation is the phase change from solid -> gas)
The melting points of metals would depend on the metal itself- different metals have different melting points. A website is available under "related link" which contains information about the melting points of different metals.
Substances have different melting points. When a substance reaches it melting point it will begin a phase change. Wikipedia's chart for elements of melting points. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_elements_by_melting_point
Room temperature is typically defined as the range of temperatures where most people feel comfortable, usually around 20-22°C (68-72°F). To find room temperature using melting and boiling points, identify substances with melting points below room temperature and boiling points above it. For example, water has a melting point of 0°C and a boiling point of 100°C, which indicates that room temperature falls within this range. Thus, any substance that remains in a liquid state at these temperatures can be used as a reference for defining room temperature.
Freezing and melting points are synonyms: at this temperature a solid become a liquid or a liquid become a solid.