It depends on other properties of chlorine, such as pressure, volume, number of moles etc. Chlorine does not have one temperature in general. It is related to other physical properties. This question does not have an answer.
Please specify other factors relating to chlorine's physical state...
Chlorine is a pale green gas at room temperature.
At standard temperature and pressure, chlorine will be a gas.
Depends on the temperature and pressure. At room temp and pressure, chlorine is a gas.
Chlorine has no "normal" temperature, it will assume whatever the ambient temperature is.
At STP (standard temperature and pressure), it is a diatomic gas, Cl2.
Chlorine is a pale green gas at room temperature.
Chlorine is a gas at room temperture.
Room temperature is room remperature. Chlorine has nothing to do with it.
At room temperature and standard pressure the element Chlorine is a gas.
At standard temperature and pressure, chlorine will be a gas.
Depends on the temperature and pressure. At room temp and pressure, chlorine is a gas.
Chlorine has no "normal" temperature, it will assume whatever the ambient temperature is.
Chlorine is a gas at the room temperature and pressure.
At room temperature sodium is a solid and chlorine is a gas.
No, chlorine typically exists as a diatomic molecule at room temperature. Monatomic chlorine is a free radical and is very reactive. Thus, chlorine atoms in elemental chlorine are almost always bonded to one another under typical conditions.
At room temperature chlorine is a gas, boron is a solid. So at room temperature boron is much denser than chlorine.
Yes, at higher pressure and/or low temperature chlorine is a liquid.