This question is not correct.
At negative ten Celsius it is a gas, at negative ten Fahrenheit it is also a gas.
krypton is a ga at minus 10 degrees. Its boiling point is -1530C
Liquefy it by cooling and reducing pressure and then do fractional distillation.
Krypton melts/freezes at 115.64 Kelvin (-251.25° Fahrenheit) and boils/condenses at 119.78 Kelvin (-243.8° Fahrenheit). So, under normal conditions, Krypton is a gas.
The bonds that keep krypton in solid phase are Van der Waals bonds. These bonds are formed by correlations in the fluctuating polarizations of nearby particles.
At negative ten Celsius it is a gas, at negative ten Fahrenheit it is also a gas.
Krypton can be a solid, a liquid or gas depending on temperature and pressure. In solid form, it is a white crystalline material. You might recall that krypton is a noble or inert gas, and it boils at about −157 °C, and melts at about -153 °C. We don't see solid krypton anywhere but in the laboratory.
Krypton is a gas and Uranium is a solid
At 1 ATM pressure and 10°F and 10°C krypton is a gas.
krypton is a ga at minus 10 degrees. Its boiling point is -1530C
Krypton is a gas at standard room temperature and pressure.
No. At room temperature krypton is a gas while nickel is a solid.
The question does not really apply, as krypton is a gas under normal conditions. As it is a non-metal, if you did solidify it, it would not be malleable.
Krypton's main uses are for low pressure filling gas for fluoresent lights.
The phase of most elements, at standard temperature and pressure, is solid. The exceptions are as follows: Gas: Hydrogen, Helium, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Neon, Chlorine, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon. Liquid: Bromine, Mercury. Standard temperature and pressure (shortened to s.t.p.) are 293K (20oC) and 1atm (normal atmospheric pressure).
gas
Liquefy it by cooling and reducing pressure and then do fractional distillation.