Heat is neither solid or liquid, it is not a gas either. I think of it only as a ray of hot.
Mercury is a liquid at 14 degrees Celsius. Mercury's melting point is -38.83 degrees Celsius and its boiling point is 356.73 degrees Celsius, so at 14 degrees Celsius, it would be in its liquid state.
At 200 degrees Celsius sulfur is a liquid.
Water changes state from liquid to solid when it reaches a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a simple example of changing from liquid to solid, or freezing.
Mercury is the element that is a liquid at 0 degrees Celsius.
Physical change, as it goes from nitrogen liquid to nitrogen gas ... No chemical change takes place.
it depends on the substance. water freezes at zero degrees Celsius, 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees celsius
Mercury is a liquid at 14 degrees Celsius. Mercury's melting point is -38.83 degrees Celsius and its boiling point is 356.73 degrees Celsius, so at 14 degrees Celsius, it would be in its liquid state.
Sulfur typically changes phases from solid to liquid at around 115 degrees Celsius.
At 200 degrees Celsius sulfur is a liquid.
Water changes state from liquid to solid when it reaches a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a simple example of changing from liquid to solid, or freezing.
At 30 degrees Celsius, bromine is in a liquid state. Bromine has a melting point of -7.2 degrees Celsius and a boiling point of 58.8 degrees Celsius, so at 30 degrees Celsius it would be in a liquid state.
Mercury is the element that is a liquid at 0 degrees Celsius.
Mercury is a liquid at 2 degrees Celsius.
Water will change from a solid to a liquid at 0°C at standard atmospheric pressure of 760 mm of mercury.
No, the density of a liquid usually decreases as temperature increases because rising temperature causes molecules to spread out. Therefore, you would generally expect the density of a liquid to be lower at 40 degrees Celsius compared to 20 degrees Celsius.
No, gold is not a liquid at 2000 degrees Celsius. Gold has a melting point of 1064 degrees Celsius, so at 2000 degrees Celsius, it would definitely be in liquid form.