Only two elements on the Periodic Table are liquids at normal temperature and pressure. They are bromine (Br, atomic #35) and Mercury (Hg, atomic #80.)
By freezing the liquid to 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius.
All liquids expand when heated. e.g. Mercury in a thermometer. One exception may be water when heated form 0 to 4 degrees Celsius.
Yes, at -94.7 degrees Celsius, or -138.46 degrees Fahrenheit. That's 138 degrees below zero! By the way, all liquids will freeze.
4 liquids,gallium,bromine,mercury,cesium
The temperature of Water at 103 degrees can be solid or liquids. Or maybe both of them
No, not all liquids boil at 100 degrees Celsius. Water boils at 100 degrees C.
32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius.
Yes: the element mercury qualifies. There may be many others.
By freezing the liquid to 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius.
The standard is 0 Celsius and 1 Atmosphere
The periodic table doesn't distinguish between liquids, solids and gases. Any element can exist in any such state depending on the temperature.
One if the most famous liquids at that temperature is mercury or quick silver as it was known previously.
212 Degrees Fahrenheit,100 Degrees Celsius
There are six elements that are liquid at 30 degrees Celsius. They are mercury, gallium, cesium, francium, rubidium and bromine.
Different liquids have different freezing points. For water, it's 32 degrees Fahrenheit. 0 degrees Celsius.
It has to reach its boiling point. That's 100 degrees Celsius for water (under normal conditions), but different temperatures for different liquids.
different liquids have different freezing points. For water its 0 degrees Celsius but other liquids will have different freezing points because of the element that make it up and the size of its molecules first you need to pick a liquid, they all have different freezing points.