i guess it's united states , it also might be New York. by the way what's ur ame .
At room temperature, silicon is a solid
The state with the highest recorded temperature of 177 degrees Fahrenheit is California, while the state with the lowest recorded temperature of 70 degrees below zero is Alaska.
At room temperature francium is a solid.
Lutetium is a solid at room temperature and pressure, making it the normal state of matter for this element.
Xenon is in the gas phase at room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure.
At normal room temperature, oxygen is a gas.
Boron is a solid at standard temperature and pressure.
Glucose is a solid in its normal state at room temperature.
Mercury and bromine are both liquid at what is commonly considered room temperature. Gallium and caesium both melt at above room temperature but below normal human body temperature, while rubidium melts just above normal human body temperature. Francium would have a melting point below caesium's (but probably above normal room temperature) if you could collect enough of it in one place to actually see and keep it from vaporizing your laboratory (it's pretty highly radioactive, and chemically reactive to boot; caesium and rubidium are also highly chemically reactive).
The four elements that are present in a liquid state at normal temperature are mercury (Hg), bromine (Br), cesium (Cs), and rubidium (Rb).
Nope. If you turn the heat off so the temperature drops below 100C, you will have non-boiling water. When the steam's temperature drops below the vaporization temperature it will return to liquid state.
A substance with a melting point below room temperature would typically be in a solid state at room temperature. However, it may start to melt or become a liquid as the temperature increases.