It depends on where you are from. Different people keep their rooms at different temperatures. North Americans tend to keep rooms warmer than Europeans, so room temperature or chambré wine is actually cool by North American standards.
No, you have misunderstoof the definitions. An oil is a lipid that is liquid at room temperature and a fat is a lipid that is solid at room temperature, therefore by definition a fat cannot be an oil at room temperature.
waterANS2:By definition, no substance fits that definition because a mineral is naturally occurring and solid at room temperature. What the question seems to be fishing for is elemental mercury. Elemental mercury does not occur naturally.
a term that indicates a combined measurement of standard atmospheric pressure and room temperature. A+
The scientific definition of room temperature, also known as standard temperature and pressure (STP), is 68°F (20°C) at one atmosphere (sea level).By this definition, bromine and mercury are the only two elements that are liquid at room temperature.Three other elements -- cesium, gallium and rubidium -- become liquid near this mark. Cesium, for example, becomes liquid at 82° (28°C).It's also believed that francium would be liquid at or just above room temperature, but this highly-unstable radioactive element has yet to be manufactured in a quantity which would confirm this.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
Fluorine is a gas at room temperature.Fluorine is a gas at room temperature
A hydrocarbon fuel consisted of a saturated three-carbon backbone and gaseous at room temperature and pressure. Chemical formula (C3H8).
iodine is solid at room temperature
Copper is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature and standard pressure the element Boron is a solid.
Whatever the room temperature happens to be at the time. If the room is 75° then the salt would be the same temperature.
It depends on the temperature. For instance, Mercury is a liquid at room temperature. Gold is solid at room temperature.