Bromine and mercury stay liquid at room temperature.
Yes. If you are talking about the thing in thermometers, yes, they are liquid.(metal- liquid) Mercury is one of the few metals that is a liquid at room temperature. Other metals, as you know, are solid at room temperature.
Bromine exists as a liquid at the room temperature.
None of the metals are gasses at room temperature.
Most metals are solids at room temperature. They're not liquids, and they're certainly not gases. Mercury is the only metal that is a liquid in this temperature range. There are 5 metals that are liquid at or close to room temperature. Cesium, Francium, Gallium, Rubidium, and Mercury.Almost all metals are solid at Room temperature and Pressure, except for Mercury, which is a liquid.
No, only mercury (Hg) is a liquid. All other metals are solids at room temperature, although gallium (Ga) and cesium (Cs) have melting points just above room temperature.
no. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature under 1 atmosphere. And hydrogen, technically, is also a metal.
no, but some do
Mercury (Hg) is the only metal that exists as a liquid at room temperature.
The only common metal that is a liquid at room temperature is Mercury. Other metals are Caesium & Francium. i think!!
There are 6 metals that are liquid at or near room temperature: cesium, francium, gallium, bromine, and rubidium. The rest of the metals are solids.
Between metals only Mercury is liquid at room temperature.