I'm guessing that the answer is hydrogen since its melting point is only a few degrees Kelvin. Second guess is Helium.
Carbon has the highest.
Tungstung has the second highest.
After Carbon (in form of diamond), the element Tungsten (W) has the second highest melting point of 3695 K, 3422 °C, 6192 °F
It is the melting point of the substance.
Melting and boiling points are physical properties of materials.
Diamond do not melt, it sublimes (solid-gas) at 3642 degrees Celsius.
The melting or the boiling point.
what is the melting point and boiling point of substance
No. Carbon has the highest melting point.
it decreases.
Celsius is a measure of temperature not a substance, and therefore it has no melting point. What is the melting point of what material in Celsius? [You haven't named the substance you want the melting point of/for]
The melting point of a substance varies according to the properties of that substance
It indicates that the substance has turned to a liquid.
what the heck are you asking? the melting point is not a substance. it's a temperature in which the substance starts to melt
does the melting point of a substance change over time
melting point
Knowing the melting point of a substance provides information to determine what the substance is if its unknown. If you are making a substance, checking the melting point will let you know if you have made what you set out to make, (because impurities can mess up the melting point)
The melting point and solidification point of a substance are the same. They are the point of transition between solid and liquid. This temperature is the melting point if the substance starts out solid and is the solidification point if the substance starts out liquid.
Carbon (C) has the highest melting point out of all the elements, and so, as it's in the first 20 elements, it has the highest melting point of the first 20 elements too. Its melting point is 3823K.