Fluorine is in a gaseous state at 21 degrees Celsius.
Hydrogen is a gas at 20 degrees, Fahrenheit and Celsius, but it you are talking Kelvin, then it is a liquid.
Hydrogen is a gas at 25 degrees Celsius.
It is a gas. Fluorine has a boiling point of -188 degrees celcius. It is a highly toxic gas and is the most electronegative element in the periodic table.
Gas mark 2 is equal to approximately 150 degrees Celsius.
-245 because on the Celsius temperature scale the negative end is cold and the positive end is hot. So as you go more negative you get colder.
Neptune's temperature is around 72 degrees Kelvin, which is about 200 degrees colder than the Earth. Neptune is far further from the sun and as such is a much colder planet than earth.
Hydrogen becomes a solid at -434.5 degrees Fahrenheit
Saturn is both hotter and colder than Earth. Saturn is a gas giant planet with a deep atmosphere of hydrogen, crushingly dense near the rocky core. The outer clouds are too cold, more than a hundred degrees below freezing, but the pressure farther down raises the temperature to hotter than the surface of the Sun.
make it colder
300-450 Degrees (Fahrenheit) on a Gas BurnerThe temperature varies according to which setting is being used, eg275 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark One300 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Two325 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Three350 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Four375 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Five400 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Six425 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Seven450 Degrees Fahrenheit at Gas Mark Eight
because westward, the air was colder and the colder it is then the better the gas in the gas chambers will spread and make the people die quicker and not suffer as much.
Fluorine is in a gaseous state at 21 degrees Celsius.
At the same pressure yes, liquid nitrogen is colder than gaseous nitrogen.
When oxygen is cooled, it changes from a gas to a liquid state at around -183 degrees Celsius. At even colder temperatures, it can solidify into a bluish-colored solid known as "dry ice."
I work for an Oil & Gas company and we use it.
Yes, but it freezes colder than water.