Obviously, a solid. If it was a liquid or gas at room temperature, wouldn't all your jewelry just melt away or vaporize into the atmosphere?
It's a solid.
Gold is a solid at room temperature and will remain a solid up to its melting point of 1,064 degrees Celsius. At 2,000 degrees Celsius, gold would be in its liquid state.
Gold is a gas at 3000 degrees Celsius as its boiling point is 2808 degrees Celsius
Gold melts at 1,064 degrees Celsius, so at 2,000 degrees Celsius it would still be a liquid.
Gold at 2 000 0C is a liquid because the boiling point is 2 870 0C.
It's a solid.
Gold is a solid at room temperature and will remain a solid up to its melting point of 1,064 degrees Celsius. At 2,000 degrees Celsius, gold would be in its liquid state.
Gold is a gas at 3000 degrees Celsius as its boiling point is 2808 degrees Celsius
Gold melts at 1,064 degrees Celsius, so at 2,000 degrees Celsius it would still be a liquid.
Gold is typically found in its solid state, as a metal at room temperature. It has a melting point of 1,064 degrees Celsius and a boiling point of 2,807 degrees Celsius, so it exists as a liquid or gas at extremely high temperatures.
Gold at 2 000 0C is a liquid because the boiling point is 2 870 0C.
Solid
No, Gold is a solid at 21 degrees Celsius, or 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Gold becomes a liquid at 1337.33 degrees K, or 1064.18 degrees Celsius or 1947.52 degrees Fahrenheit.
Gold as it is commonly found is a solid.
No, gold is not a liquid at 2000 degrees Celsius. Gold has a melting point of 1064 degrees Celsius, so at 2000 degrees Celsius, it would definitely be in liquid form.
Its a Gas
Gold's natural state is solid at room temperature and pressure. It has a melting point of 1,064 degrees Celsius and a boiling point of 2,807 degrees Celsius, so it becomes a liquid and eventually a gas at higher temperatures.