I am assuming that you mean at room temperature and 1 standard atmosphere. Under such conditions, Mercury would be a liquid.
Any material's physical state is determined by its temperature and the pressure being exerted upon it. Mercury, as well as most elements/compounds, can exist in all three states if exposed to the proper conditions.
Mercury is a liquid at room temperature and pressure. It has a melting point of -38.83°C and a boiling point of 356.73°C.
Mercury is a liquid metal between -38,83 0C and +356,73 0C.
evaporation solid to liquid - melting liquid to gas - evaporation gas to liquid - condensation liquid to solid - freezing solid to gas and gas to solid - sublimation
Freezing (Liquid 2 solid) Melting (solid 2 liquid) Boiling (liquid 2 gas) Evaporation (liquid 2 gas) Condensation (gas 2 liquid) Sublimation (solid 2 gas) hope this helped
The general classes of colloids are sols (solid particles dispersed in a liquid), gels (cross-linked networks of solid particles dispersed in a liquid), and emulsions (liquid droplets dispersed in another liquid).
mercury is a liquid
liquid
Mercury chloride is a odorless solid.
At room temperature mercury is a liquid.
All 3. ;)
All 3. ;)
All 3. ;)
The three elements that are not solid, liquid, or gas are bromine, mercury, and francium. Bromine is a liquid at room temperature, mercury is a liquid at room temperature, and francium is a solid due to being a metal.
Mercury is a liquid metal between -38,83 0C and +356,73 0C.
Mercury is a liquid metal between -38,83 0C and +356,73 0C.
The answer is trivial. Some are solid, some liquid and some are gas. The solid ones are those (that at normal conditions) are not liquid (such as mercury) nor a gas (such as oxygen).
solid: iron + copper? liquid: mercury gas: hydrogen,oxygen, nitrogen