Salt (sodium chloride) is melted at 801 oC.
Diamond melts or vaporizes above about 4000 deg C. If the pressure is high enough it is liquid, if lower it is a gas. If heated in air diamond will burn above about 850 deg. C becoming carbon dioxide also a gas.
Yes, silver melts at 961.78 degrees C
Iron melts and becomes liquid at an 2800 degrees Fahrenheit. It can still conduct electricity, but, like all conductors, it conducts better at lower temperatures.
silver melts at 1536 degrees Celsius
Salt cubes will also melt at temperatures of -38
1,763°F melting point of silver 1,984°F melting point of copper the answer is silver
Warming temperatures and ocean currents melts the Antarctic.
Liquid silver.
Diamond
Diamond melts or vaporizes above about 4000 deg C. If the pressure is high enough it is liquid, if lower it is a gas. If heated in air diamond will burn above about 850 deg. C becoming carbon dioxide also a gas.
Yes, silver melts at 961.78 degrees C
It is resistant to sulfates. It can withstand high temperatures. (It melts at around 3000 F.) It is resistant to sulfates. It can withstand high temperatures. (It melts at around 3000 F.)
Iron melts and becomes liquid at an 2800 degrees Fahrenheit. It can still conduct electricity, but, like all conductors, it conducts better at lower temperatures.
Antifreeze decreases the freezing point of ice so that it melts at lower temperatures also.
ones that are kept in high temperatures (the sun)
Silver melts at 961.78 Deg C
Usually when talking of metals, the point at which silver transitions between states of solid and liquid is called the melting point rather than the freezing point, because of how high these temperatures usually are. For Silver, this temperature is 1763.2 Fahrenheit, or 961.78 Celcius.