Ammonia (NH3) is a (very 'water' soluble) gas
Nitrogen ice is solid. Liquid nitrogen is liquid. At standard temperature and pressure, nitrogen is gaseous.
Bromine is a liquid at -5.00 degrees Celsius.
Chlorine is a solid at 0 degrees celsius because it's also a solid at 25 degrees celsius.
Water will change from a solid to a liquid at 0°C at standard atmospheric pressure of 760 mm of mercury.
Bromine's melting point is -7.2 °C, so at -5 °C, bromine would be a liquid.
Water ice would remain solid in liquid ammonia, because the temperature of the ammonia is well below 0 degrees Celsius, the melting point of ice. At normal atmospheric pressure, ammonia is liquid below minus 33.34 degrees C.
Water is a solid when it's 0 degrees Celsius or lower and a liquid at 0 degrees Celsius or higher and when it is 100 degrees Celsius it turns in to a gas
Solid
It is a liquid.
Nitrogen ice is solid. Liquid nitrogen is liquid. At standard temperature and pressure, nitrogen is gaseous.
It's a solid.
It depends on the solid. Solid ice turns to liquid water at 0 degrees Celsius. Solid Tungsten doesn't turn to liquid until it's over 3000 degrees Celsius.
Gold is a gas at 3000 degrees Celsius as its boiling point is 2808 degrees Celsius
Liquid Oxygen becomes liquid at -183.0 C and solid at −218.79 °C
Krypton melts at -157 degrees Celsius and therefore is a liquid. It boils at -153 degrees Celsius and becomes a gas.
solid, at 20 degrees celsius
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.