no. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature under 1 atmosphere. And hydrogen, technically, is also a metal.
No, there is one exception. Mercury is a metal that is liquid at room temperature.
The only metallic element that is a liquid at room temperature is mercury. All others are solid.
With the exception of mercury and bromine, which is a liquid, metals are solid at room temperature.
Solid
It depends at what temperature. If we talk about room temperature then a natural state of a metal like Mercury is liquid (same as some non-metals like glass) while others like Copper are solid. Of course, in the vacuum of space where there is no influence of heat or sunlight, all metals are solid.
Europium is solid at room temperature, as are all metals with the exception of mercury.
The zinc's state at room temperature is solid commercially it is available as chunks.
Solid
With the exception of mercury and bromine, which is a liquid, metals are solid at room temperature.
That obviously depends on the temperature. At room temperature, most metals are solid.
Solid
At room temperature all metalloids are solid.
Magnesium is in the state of a solid form.
At room temperature, all metals except Mercury are solid.
It depends at what temperature. If we talk about room temperature then a natural state of a metal like Mercury is liquid (same as some non-metals like glass) while others like Copper are solid. Of course, in the vacuum of space where there is no influence of heat or sunlight, all metals are solid.
The state of matter of most metals is the solid state. Mercury and Gallium are the only exceptions, as they are liquids at room temperature.
Europium is solid at room temperature, as are all metals with the exception of mercury.
Solid
SOLID.