Any substance with a melting point above this given temperature.
At 20 degrees Celsius krypton is a gas. You would have to bring the temperature way down to just below -153.22 (yes, negative!) degrees Celsius for krypton to become a liquid, and just below -157.36 degrees Celsius to make it a solid!
when it freezes
Freezing Temperature of water is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit and 273.15 KelvinIf you freeze water it will become ice which is solid
At waters boiling point 100 degrees Celsius at sea level. At higher altitudes the temperature is less because there is less air pressure.
Elemental liquid mercury freezes at -38.8290 ° C
the freezing temperature of Argon is-189 celsius.(melting)
130 degrees Celsius
The boiling point is at 1665 degrees Fahrenheit or 907 degrees Celsius.
-40 Fahrenheit and -40 Celsius are the same! (Minus 40 degrees)
Water freezes and becomes a solid at 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
The temperature that it takes for water to freeze into solid ice is 0 degrees Celsius. Other units of measurement for temperature include Fahrenheit (32 degrees) or Kelvin (273).
The freezing point of water in Celsius is 0 degrees Celsius. The freezing point in Fahrenheit is 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
0 Degrees Celsius
At 20 degrees Celsius krypton is a gas. You would have to bring the temperature way down to just below -153.22 (yes, negative!) degrees Celsius for krypton to become a liquid, and just below -157.36 degrees Celsius to make it a solid!
No, mercury does not become solid in hot temperature and liquid in coolest temperature. But mercury becomes gas or liquid in hot temperature and becomes solid in coolest temperature. Mercury becomes solid after freezing point of -38.72 degrees Celsius. Solid Mercury can become superconductor in reaching of its critical temperature 4.2 K. Mercury is liquid under the room temperature (25 degrees Celsius). Mercury becomes gas after boiling point of 357 degrees Celsius.
At its melting point. For example, the melting point of ice is 0 degrees celsius, so ice (solid) will melt to become water (liquid) at this temperature.
The temperature varies in each substance. When liquids become solids, we call this the freezing point (liquefaction point) and when they become liquid, we call this the melting point (crystallization point). These two points are NOT exactly the same in all cases but in most.