Oxygen is in a gaseous state at 1000 degrees Celsius.
At a temperature of 20 degrees C (or F, for that matter) oxygen is a gas.
At -204 degrees Celsius, oxygen is in a solid state, specifically as oxygen ice.
Oxygen is a gas at 24 degrees Celsius.
At 1000 degrees Celsius, iron is in its molten state, which means it is a liquid. This is above its melting point of approximately 1535 degrees Celsius.
At -250 degrees Celsius, oxygen exists as a gas. Oxygen's boiling point is -183 degrees Celsius, so at -250 degrees Celsius, it remains in a gaseous state.
At a temperature of 20 degrees C (or F, for that matter) oxygen is a gas.
At -204 degrees Celsius, oxygen is in a solid state, specifically as oxygen ice.
Oxygen is a gas at 24 degrees Celsius.
gaseous
At 1000 degrees Celsius, mercury is in its liquid state as its melting point is -38.83 degrees Celsius and boiling point is 356.73 degrees Celsius.
Pure oxygen is a gas at 25 C, regardless of the pressure.
At 1000 degrees Celsius, iron is in its molten state, which means it is a liquid. This is above its melting point of approximately 1535 degrees Celsius.
At -250 degrees Celsius, oxygen exists as a gas. Oxygen's boiling point is -183 degrees Celsius, so at -250 degrees Celsius, it remains in a gaseous state.
Liquid Oxygen becomes liquid at -183.0 C and solid at −218.79 °C
No, it does not.
It is a gas. A very cold gas, but still a gas. It turns to liquid oxygen at −182.96 °C; −297.33 °F
The melting point of oxygen is -361.8 degrees F (-218.8 degrees C). The boiling point of oxygen is -297.31 degrees F (-182.95 degrees C).