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.
One substance that has a high melting point is diamond.
it has a low melting point
All metals have different melting points but they are all high
Chromium has a high melting point of 1,857°C (3,375°F) making it a refractory metal.
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.
Yes, it has a melting point of 1683 Kelvin.
No, this is a low melting point.
For example the melting point of acetylene -80,8 oC.
"High" is kind of subjective, but its melting point is 500oC, so I'd say that's pretty high.
Uranium has a high melting point of 2,075°C (3,767°F), which is relatively high compared to many other metals. This high melting point makes uranium suitable for use in nuclear power reactors, where it needs to withstand high temperatures.
well it depends if it can melt if the state changes at a hot temperature= high melting point ll ll ll ll ll ll cold ll = low melting point
The melting point of 1-propanol is -126 oC.