It would be a solid.
Melting Point: 1360.0 °C - 1633.15 °K
Boiling Point: 3041.0 °C - 3314.15 °K
Average room temperature is around 23 degrees Celsius. So hopefully your room isn't in the center of the Earth.
If you take a deep breath, you've inhaled nitrogen along with the oxygen you wanted. i.e. Gas phase.
It is supposed that bohrium is a solid metal at room temperature.
The state of matter of a substance at room temperature depends on whether the melting and boiling points are above or below room temperature. At room temperature:A substance is solid if both the melting and boiling points are above room temperature.A substance is liquid if the melting point is below room temperature but the boiling point is above room temperature.A substance is a gas if both the melting point and boiling point are below room temperature.
If it were a solid at room temperature, then that would be the state of matter. However, hydrogen is NOT solid at room temperature. It is a gas and that would be the state of matter.
Tgis question is simply saying what is its state of matter at room temperature. This substance or uranium is a solid at room temperature.
Gas at room temperature
Terbium melts at 1629 Kelvins. Therefore, it is solid at room temperature.
Carbon at room temperature is solid.
Neptunium is a solid metal at room temperature.
Gas at room temp!
just like you
It is a solid.
It is a gas.
Silicon is a solid at room temperature.
solid...
Well now, that would depend on what kind of matter you're talking about, wouldn't it. At room temperature (and room pressure) . . . -- Oxygen, nitrogen, and helium are in the gas phase. -- Water, mercury, and grain alcohol are in the liquid phase. -- Iron, sugar, and candle wax are in the solid phase.
Calcium is a solid at room temperature. (See the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics for physical properties.)