The lowest melting point is of course - 39 0C.
That point is in north-central Arizona, about 39 miles southeast of Flagstaff.
35 N, 39 W is located in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean and does not belong to any nation. However, 35 N, 39 E, is located in Syria, and 35 S, 39 W is in Brazil. I hope this helps!
Samarium has a melting point of 1072 0C, near 1060.
That point is on the North Island of New Zealand, about 35 miles north-northeast across the bay from Napier, and 100 miles southeast of Tauranga.
Gases:....Group:18, 17, ..16., ..15Period 2: Ne, F2, O2/O3, N2Period 3: Ar, Cl2Period 4: KrPeriod 5: XePeriod 6: RnPeriod 1: He,(H2: questionable nonmetal, but the only remaining gas!)Liquid:ONLY nonmetal: Br2 (melting point -7 0C)metals: Hg - mercury (melting point -39 0C) Cs - cesium and Ga - galliumSolids: ALL OTHER ELEMENTS (both nonmetals as metals) not mentioned above
mercury
39% = 39/100
Mercury
2539 degrees
I believe it to be -39 degrees Celsius, but I am not sure.
That depends on the metal. Mercury is liquid at room temperature (melting point -39° C) Tin has a melting point of a few hundred degrees (melting point 232° C) Titanium melts at over a thousand degrees (melting point - 1668° C) Tungsten with the highest melting point of the metal elements melts at 3422 °C
The melting point oof salt is far higher then the melting point of acetone.
Refined, Bleached & Deodorised (RBDPO) Slip Melting Point = 33-39 degrees C (Testing Method = AOCS Cc 3-25)
Its melting/freezing point is -39°C. It turns into gas at 356°C.
39/100 is the fraction in lowest terms.
39 + 35 = 74
It is: 26/39 = 2/3 in its lowest terms