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Potassium can be solid, liquid or gas. At normal room temperature and atmospheric pressure it is a solid. Above 63.3oC it is a liquid and above 760oC it is a gas.
It is a solid, only in extreme heat it would be a liquid. And Im not sure what would make it a gas.
Mercury's state of matter is a liquid. Mercury is not a good conductor of heat and cinnabar is the largest natural source for mercury.
temperature. The higher the temperature of the liquid, the more of the solid you can dissolve in it.
Magnesium is a solid at normal temperature and pressure.
At normal room temperature, it's a solid.
At normal temperature and pressure, silver (Ag) is a metallic solid.
At normal temperature and pressure it is a gas.
At normal temperature and pressure it is a gas.
Potassium can be solid, liquid or gas. At normal room temperature and atmospheric pressure it is a solid. Above 63.3oC it is a liquid and above 760oC it is a gas.
Under normal conditions of temperature and pressure the mineral Quartz is a crystalline solid.
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Potassium can be solid, liquid or gas. At normal room temperature and atmospheric pressure it is a solid. Above 63.3oC it is a liquid and above 760oC it is a gas.
It is the temperature at which a substance, under normal atmospheric pressure changes from the solid phase to the liquid phase.
Bromine is one of only two elements that is a liquid under normal conditions.
That depends on the temperature. At normal Earth surface temperatures, sand is a solid. Heat it up and it becomes a liquid, heat if further and it will vaporize.