The standard temperature is 0 degree Celsius.
there is no difference
STP means standard temperature and pressure and VTP means volume temperature and pressure oh and btw standard temperature and pressure is 0 degrees Celsius and 1 atmosphere
At standard temperature and pressure, sulfur is a solid.
Standard temperature and pressure (STP) is a standard by which comparisons can be made. STP is 0°C (273 K) and 1.00 ATM (760 mmHg, 101.325 kPa). Molar volume is based upon the conditions at STP, which is 22.4 L for 1 mole of any [ideal] gas.
Standard temperature change is 3 deg. F. per 1K ft.
There is no internationally agreed standard temperature.
Lithium is a solid metal at standard temperature and pressure.
"Standard temperature" by itself means 273.15 K. I've never heard the phrase "standard temperature of sulfur" and have no idea what whomever used it might have meant.
For chemistry, after IUPAC rules the standard temperature is 0 oC and the standard pressure is1 bar.
There is no standard.
No: hydrogen sulfide is a gas at standard room temperature and pressure
At STP(Standard Temperature and pressure), the temperature is zero degrees Celsius(273 Kelvin) and the pressure is 1 atmosphere. At RTP(Room temperature and pressure), the temperature is 25 degrees Celsius(298 Kelvin) and the pressure is 1 atmosphere.
Kelvin
STP = Standard Temperature and Pressure After the IUPAC rules the standard temperature is 0 0C and the standard pressure is 100 kPa (0,986 atm). The molar volume of an ideal gas at STP is 22,710 980(38) L.
The standard room temperature in Celsius is 21°c and in Fahrenheit is 70°f or 294k
At room temperature neptunium is a solid metal.
Platinum is a solid at standard temperature and pressure.