Between metals only Mercury is liquid at room temperature.
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature. Francium, Cesium, Gallium, and Rubidium become liquids slightly above room temperature, meaning you could watch them melt in your hand! Every other metal, however, is a solid at room temperature.
All metals melt at high temperature... the metal that doesn't melt is mercury as it is already liquid at room temperature..... There is no metal that undergoes sublimation unlike non-metals.
Aneýtectic alkali alloys and some mid p-block mixtures melt at room temperature or above, and eýtectic below.
The metal manganese is a solid at room temperature, and does not melt until 1250 degrees C.
Mercury is the only metal liquid at room temperature. Others come close, like Gallium, which will melt in your hand from body heat.
No, most metals are solid at room temperature, though they can all melt when heated enough.The only exception is mercury, which is liquid at room temperature.
Mercury; gallium melt also in very hot summer days.
ice can melt at room temperature. Anything that is liquid at room temperature would, in its frozen state, melt at room temperature. Oils, beverages and mercury - if in a frozen state - would melt when exposed to room temperature.
Polonium is a metal at room temperature.
its a metal richardMercury is a liquid metal at room temperature .
the metal that is liquid at room temperature is mercury