5596 to 5627 degree celsius
Rhenium has the highest boiling point: 5 596 0C.
Tungsten has the highest melting point of any element at 3,422 degrees Celsius (6,192 degrees Fahrenheit) and rhenium has the highest boiling point at 5,596 degrees Celsius (10,105 degrees Fahrenheit).
I don't Know ask somebody else
The freezing point of rhenium is 3,180 degrees Celsius.
As examples are wolfram, tantalum, rhenium.
Helium melting point: -272,2 0C Rhenium boiling point: 5 596 0C
The highest boiling point among elements can be found by looking at the group of the periodic table in which the element is located. Generally, elements with higher atomic numbers and greater atomic masses will have higher boiling points. Within a group, elements with stronger intermolecular forces, such as metallic and covalent bonding, will also tend to have higher boiling points.
Tungsten has the highest boiling point of the elements. See link below. (Note that Wikipedia has a different value than you give in the question, 5828K or 5555°C.) I checked some standout minerals, and they all boil at lower temperatures CaF2, even carbon (diamond, graphite). Note that "boiling point" can be adjusted by changing the pressure, as with anything.
Helium has the lowest boiling point of any naturally occurring material. Monoatomic Hydrogen remains a gas at a lower temperature but that does not occur in nature.
No, Rhenium in its natural state is a metal.
Boiling is the phase where the boiling occurs. The point at which the boiling occurs is the boiling point.
Rhenium is commonly found as a solid in its natural state. It has a very high melting point of 3,180°C and a boiling point of 5,627°C, so it exists as a solid at room temperature and pressure.