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In a liquid, as at sea level water's boiling point is 100 degrees and it's freezing point is 0.
A solid I believe.
The state of matter would be solid
Nitrogen would be a gas at 25 degrees Celsius.
No. The moon is not a planet; it is a moon. If it had its own orbit around the sun it would be considered a terrestrial planet.
gas
It would most likely be in the form of water vapor seeing that it is 100s to 1000s of degrees hot.
venusVenus
I would expect Mercury to be the hottest planet, since it's the closest one to the sun. That's why it's so surprising to learn that Venus is hotter than Mercury.
I would expect it would be Hawaii.
a natural state of matter would be tellurium
The amount of planet matter equal to that of the astronaut would annihilate.
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.
You mass is the same no matter where you are. You weight would be greatest on Jupiter.
In a liquid, as at sea level water's boiling point is 100 degrees and it's freezing point is 0.
So far, Jupiter is leading with 63 named moons. Since it is the largest planet, you would expect it to have the most moons.
Certainly - all matter has density. The density of a gas planet would probably be less than that of a more solid planet but it would still have a non-zero density.