Iron will melt at around 1510 degree C or 2750 degree F. Steel melts at 2750 degrees C or 2500 degrees F.
The traditional melting point of ice is 1 degree C, but anyhting above 1C should do the trick.
Copper melts at 1084.62 C or 1984.316 FCopper melts at 1084.62 C or 1984.31
Each substance has a different melting point. That depends on what compound you're talking about: Of table salt, NaCl, it is 801 °C though of water (ice), H2O, it is 0 °C and of carbon dioxide it is even lower: -78 °C
Ice is melt 0 degrees C, but gold melts at 1063 degrees C and oxygen melts out frigid
-38.83 deg C.
Iron will melt at around 1510 degree C or 2750 degree F. Steel melts at 2750 degrees C or 2500 degrees F.
A substance's specific heat capacity (C) is the amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of 1g of a substance 1 degree celsius.
It is still a solid but it is turning to be a liquid statesBromine boils at 58-590 C and melts at -70C so at 300 C it is a fuming reddish brown liquid.
water into ice at minus 0 degree c
The traditional melting point of ice is 1 degree C, but anyhting above 1C should do the trick.
Vitamin C is the most unstable vitamin which can be easily denatured. It should be kept at under 70 degree Celsius to avoid damage caused by the heat.
Barium melts at 725°C. physical or chemical property
Silicon melts at 1414 C or 2577 F.
Iron melts at 1535 °C or 2797 °F for those you us living in the U.S.. this is not a thing that melts easily
Each substance has a different melting point. That depends on what compound you're talking about: Of table salt, NaCl, it is 801 °C though of water (ice), H2O, it is 0 °C and of carbon dioxide it is even lower: -78 °C
Copper melts at 1084.62 C or 1984.316 FCopper melts at 1084.62 C or 1984.31