Any chemical is melted at 99 0C.
Are you sure you mean carbon? Carbon melts (turns to liquid) at 3550 degrees C, and boils at 3825 degrees C.
The melting point of a solid is the same as the freezing point of a liquid. For example, water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 Celsius), so ice would melt at 32 degrees Fahrenheit( 0 Celsius).
Mercury
it turns to silvery beads
Melting is when a solid forms in to a liquid causing it to melt. For an example an ice cube is a solid and when it melts into water it turns into a liquid. Freezing is when a liquid forms into a solid. for an example water can freeze up and turn it into an ice cube. Look i said before ice cube is a solid so if water turns into a solid it is freezing.
Mercury turns to a liquid at 25 degrees Celsius.
Its called the boiling point and its different depending on the substance.
Hydrogen liquifies at -196 degrees celsius.
Water is a solid when it's 0 degrees Celsius or lower and a liquid at 0 degrees Celsius or higher and when it is 100 degrees Celsius it turns in to a gas
it turns at 32 degrees Fahrenheit and 0 degrees Celsius.
Boiling point is the temperature in which a substance in a liquid state turns to a gas state. In a pure substance (an element or 1 compound) that temperature is a unique property. For example, pure water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. Methanol has a boiling point of 64.7 degrees Celsius. In pure substances the temperature time graph makes a plateau. The boiling point is the same as the condensation point (where a gas turns into a liquid) for that substance.
It depends on the solid. Solid ice turns to liquid water at 0 degrees Celsius. Solid Tungsten doesn't turn to liquid until it's over 3000 degrees Celsius.
Are you sure you mean carbon? Carbon melts (turns to liquid) at 3550 degrees C, and boils at 3825 degrees C.
Liquid turns into solid when it reaches its freezing point. Example- the freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius.
The freezing point of water is 0 degrees Celsius. When a liquid freezes it turns into solid. For example water turns into ice.
Its molecules are gaining enough energy to break from a liquid into a gas. This is at 212 degrees Fahrenheit though. For Celsius its 100 degrees. At 212 degrees celsius it is molecules in a gaseous form and it fly in a random, 360 degrees flight path and keep going until it hits a surface and ricochets or it loses its energy and then turns back into a liquid state.
In order to turn water (a liquid) into ice (a solid) the temperature would have to be 32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius