There are an abundance of metals that we haven't discovered yet because we don't know of any star to create fusion with Iron, once that star that does fuse iron atoms then it will be able to fuse more elements leading to ones we have never even seen before. This will be soon though, very soon...
| Although hydrogen is thought to become a metallic substance at temperatures near absolute zero (-273oC) this answer is limited to metals in the more common sense of the word.
The metal with the lowest melting point is Mercury - the only metallic element with a melting point (-40oC) below room temperature (20oC).
Then there's gallium (which melts at 86oF (30oC) which would be liquid on a warm day or in your hand.
A common non-toxic alloy is Field's metal which melts at 144oF. (The temperature of a cup of hot coffee.)
Every metal is solid if you get it cold enough, liquid if you get it warm enough,
and gas if you get it hot enough.
Mercury is a metal that happens to be liquid at a temperature where you're
comfortable.
All metals have a fluid temperature point. Iron can be found as a liquid at 2800 deg F near Earth's core but not necessarily at the core. Perhaps, your question might be posing at room temperature which would be Mercury.
Mercury is a metal that is in the liquid state at room temperature.
Other metals are only in a liquid state once they have been raised to above their melting point - usually in a furnace.
Mercury is the metal that has the smallest temperature range as a liquid. Mercury is only the metal that is a liquid at room temperature.
Mercury (symbol Hg).
Mercury
Mercury.
No metal has a melting point of 32F.
The lowest melting point is of course - 39 0C.
Mercury. Boiling point 629.88 K, 356.73 °C Melting point 234.32 K, -38.83 °C
The metal with lowest M.P is Hg (Mercury).
W on the periodic table. the element with the highest melting/boiling point is tungsten.
phospherous
Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point at 3695 K, 3422 °C, 6192 °F and Mercury has the lowest metal melting point with 234.32 K, -38.83 °C, -37.89 °F.
No metal has a melting point of 32F.
The lowest melting point is of course - 39 0C.
Mercury Hg -38.8' Now you could consider Hydrogen to be a metal if you are willing to get creative with the definition of metal. In that case it would be −259.16 °C
Helium with a melting point of -272.905
Mercury. Boiling point 629.88 K, 356.73 °C Melting point 234.32 K, -38.83 °C
The incipient melting point refers to how metal is heated. It is the point just before the metal reaches its melting point.
Silver is a metal that has a melting point of 962 degrees.
Mercury is the greatest exception, because it is liquid at room temperature. The metal with the next lowest melting point is gallium.
The melting points of metals would depend on the metal itself- different metals have different melting points. A website is available under "related link" which contains information about the melting points of different metals.
The metal with lowest M.P is Hg (Mercury).