At 70 degrees it is no longer a liquid. It has been in gaseous form since it 's temperature rose to about minus 320 degrees. In order to maintain it's liquid status oxygen, nitrogen and all other gases need to be stored at temperatures well below minus 300 degrees. If you add pressure to it you can keep it a liquid a bit above that but at 70 degrees it is just gas and as a gas it is part of the atmospheric pressure which is 14.7psi at sea level.
70 degrees C
No, Gold is a solid at 21 degrees Celsius, or 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Gold becomes a liquid at 1337.33 degrees K, or 1064.18 degrees Celsius or 1947.52 degrees Fahrenheit.
In any room? 72-74. In a server room? 66-70.
in venenzuala
Centigrade also known as Celsius is the interval system for the measurement of temperature where Fahrenheit is a thermodynamic temperature scale. 70 degrees centigrade is equal to 158 degrees Fahrenheit. 70 degrees Fahrenheit is 21.1 degrees centigrade.
Liquid nitrogen (LN2) at atmospheric pressure and at its boiling point has a specific gravity of 0.808 (water = 1) or a density of 0.808 g/mL = 0.808 kg/L = 808 kg/m3 = 1.7813 lb/L = 50.44 lb/ft3 = 6.743 lb/US Gallon.
Air normally liquefies at around -196 degrees Celsius (-321 degrees Fahrenheit) under normal atmospheric pressure (STP) This temperature is known as the boiling point of liquid nitrogen, which is one of the main components of air. When air is cooled to this temperature, it undergoes liquefaction, separating into its constituent gases, mainly nitrogen, oxygen, and argon.
The state is dependent upon the temperature. At 70 degrees F and below, some of the carbon dioxide is in the form of a liquid, with some vapor. If the temperature exceeds 88 degrees F (the critical temperature of carbon dioxide), the liquid phase disappears, and the contents of the extinguisher is vapor. The majority of the CO2 stored in a fire extinguisher is a liquid under pressure of more than 5 atmospheres. The boiling temperature of carbon dioxide is 70 degrees Fahrenheit BELOW zero at 5.2 bar (about 73 psi), meaning it is liquid or supercritical fluid at room temperature if it is compressed at more pressure than that.
70 degrees C
Mercury
70 kpa
No, Gold is a solid at 21 degrees Celsius, or 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Gold becomes a liquid at 1337.33 degrees K, or 1064.18 degrees Celsius or 1947.52 degrees Fahrenheit.
The answer is in the question Everything can be a solid, liquid or a gas. Below 114'C Iodine is solid, at 114'C it melts and becomes a liquid. Then at 184'C Iodine boils and becomes a gas, therefore above 184'C it is a gas. This is assuming that the pressure stays constant. Usually if you raise the pressure the boiling and melting point drop. For example at sea level water will boil at 100'C, on the summit of mount Everest (where the pressure is low) water will boil at 70'C. You can almost imagine the low pressure sucking the water into a gas, and the high pressure squashing it back into a liquid
70 degrees Celsius = 158 degrees Fahrenheit
70 degrees Celsius = 158 degrees Fahrenheit.
70 degrees Fahrenheit = 21.11 degrees Centigrade.
70 degrees Fahrenheit is 21.11 degrees Celsius.