There is no common melting point, it will vary a lot with the type of metal.
It depends on the metal.
Refer to the related links for a chart of metals and their melting points.
The melting point of magnesium is 650 degrees celcius. It has the lowest melting point among all the group II metals (alkaline earth metals), though the melting points generally decrease down the group - magnesium is an exception and has the lowest melting point among them.
Of all the metals, the one with the highest melting point is tungsten, with a melting point of 6,192 degrees Fahrenheit. Rhenium comes in second with a melting point of 5,767 degrees Fahrenheit.
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.
Seeing as metals are solid at room temperature (except for mercury, which is a liquid), and heating metals causes them to become liquid (melt, which is the melting point). Then the boiling point of metals is going to be extremely high.
If you mean melting... different metals and materials have different temperatures that they melt at, called their Melting Point.
Tungsten has the highest melting point of the elements and it is a metal.
Low Melting Point. Most metals have high melting point and are solids at room temperature.
Low Melting Point. Most metals have high melting point and are solids at room temperature.
no
The melting point of magnesium is 650 degrees celcius. It has the lowest melting point among all the group II metals (alkaline earth metals), though the melting points generally decrease down the group - magnesium is an exception and has the lowest melting point among them.
No. Group 1 metals (commonly called the alkali metals) have low melting points.
The melting point is about 170 - 230 degrees, depending on the percentages of metals included.
Usually the transition metals. (Tungsten has the highest melting point of all the metals.)
Physical State Lustre Malleability Ductility Hardness Valency Conduction Density Melting and Boiling Point Electropositive Character
No, not all of them, but some of them do.
Of all the metals, the one with the highest melting point is tungsten, with a melting point of 6,192 degrees Fahrenheit. Rhenium comes in second with a melting point of 5,767 degrees Fahrenheit.
All metals have different melting points but they are all high