Francium in 27Celcius,Ceasium in 29celcius,Gallium in 30celcius
Yes, but that would take some serious engineering. Not realistic to do on a finished, store-bought item.
If the temperature is below the melting point then the element is a solid.If the temperature is above the melting point but below the boiling point, then the element is a liquid.If the temperature is above the boiling point, then the element is a gas.
Higher, I suppose.
No, remember any element heated to a high enough temperature will form a gaseous phase for instance mercury vapour would be heavier than H2S.
Depends if you mean the element Mercury or the planet Mercury? The element would be whatever temperature it is heated to, the planet would probably be in the range about -300°F (-184°C) (on the side away from the sun) to about 800°F (427°C) on the side facing the sun.
All liquids would evaporate if heated to a high enough temperature.
Silver would be a solid at room temperature. This is also what happens with gold. If both were heated, then they would be liquids.
Generally speaking conductivity of metals decreases as the temperature increases.
The term "1500 watt" refers to a measure of power, not temperature. To convert power in watts to temperature in degrees, you would need additional context, such as the specific application (like heating a substance) and its thermal properties. For instance, in a heating element, the temperature reached would depend on factors like the material being heated, its mass, and the duration of heating.
Mercury or HG is an element that is liquid at room temperature and is not a diatomic element.
No- hydrogen is a gas at room temperature.
If two objects were heated quickly to the same temperature, one larger in size than the other, then they would cool at different temperatures. The smaller one would cool faster as it has less mass that is able to hold the higher temperature as long.