Bromine is a liquid at room temperature. There are only two elements that are liquid in room temperature. The other one is Mercury.
No, it depends on temperature. At room temperature most elements are solid, some are gases, and only two are fluid.
No, in its native, room temperature state it is a liquid , one of the 2 elements (Mercury being the other ) to be liquid at room temperature.
There are only a few elements that officially classed as liquids. To be classed as a liquid, an element must be in liquid state at room temperature. There are only two known elements that are liquids at room temperature. They are:Mercury (Hg) - Atomic Number 80 - Transition MetalBromine (Br) - Atomic Number 35 - Group 17(7) Halogen
At room temperature most of the elements are solid. except Cs,Ga,Br,Fr,Hg (these are liquid) and nonmetals which are gaseous..except Br which being a nonmetal is not a gas.
Bromine is a liquid at room temperature. There are only two elements that are liquid in room temperature. The other one is Mercury.
No, it depends on temperature. At room temperature most elements are solid, some are gases, and only two are fluid.
No, in its native, room temperature state it is a liquid , one of the 2 elements (Mercury being the other ) to be liquid at room temperature.
The four elements that are present in a liquid state at normal temperature are mercury (Hg), bromine (Br), cesium (Cs), and rubidium (Rb).
It could be anything depending on the elements Solid, liquid or gas
Liquid state is the most uncommon. There are only 2 elements that are liquids at room temperature. They are Bromine and Mercury.
There are only a few elements that officially classed as liquids. To be classed as a liquid, an element must be in liquid state at room temperature. There are only two known elements that are liquids at room temperature. They are:Mercury (Hg) - Atomic Number 80 - Transition MetalBromine (Br) - Atomic Number 35 - Group 17(7) Halogen
They are the only two elements that exist in the liquid state at standard temperature and pressure.
At room temperature most of the elements are solid. except Cs,Ga,Br,Fr,Hg (these are liquid) and nonmetals which are gaseous..except Br which being a nonmetal is not a gas.
Yes. Bromine and mercury are the only 2 elements that exist as liquids at room temperature (25oC). However, there 4 other elements that exist as liquids at temperatures slighty above room temperature: * Francium at 27oC * Cesium at 28.6oC * Gallium at 30.3oC * Rubidium at 39.5oC
The physical state of Mercury is a LIQUID at 20oC . It is one of only two elements that are liquid at Standard Temperature and Pressure. The other being Bromine.
Its mostly solid except for mercury. Mercury is liquid at room temperature.