I am a chemist at the university of South Carolina and i have been experimenting on the melting point of oxygen. Oxygen at its melting point acts very stable . it dosnt act uncontrolable.
It will melt! But you have to add enough energy to equal the latent heat as well as to bring the ice up to the freezing point, if it is in a freezer to start it will be at about -21degC.
no because it is a metal single Ag is an atom
Yes, all substances have a melting point. However, special procedures may need to be followed to melt magnesium as it is a flammable substance.
The thermometer would melt
The addition of a solvent to water depresses is freezing point but also depresses its melting point in its solid state (ice) meaning it makes them lower. That is why you put salt on an icy road, so that it will melt below water's ordinary freezing point (0°C). Ice would melt faster in saltwater because the solvent, being salt in this case, would lower the melting point of the ice causing it to melt at a lower temperature. This is counterintuitive when it seems putting salt on ice makes it colder. This is not actually occurring. The ice's melting point is being reduced and therefore melting.
The melting point of oxygen is -361.8 degrees F (-218.8 degrees C). The boiling point of oxygen is -297.31 degrees F (-182.95 degrees C).
hydrogen is a gas consequently doesn't have a melting point. You can't melt oxygen can you. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Actually oxygen can freeze and melt: its melting point is -361.8°F (-218.8°C). Even hydrogen can freeze and melt: its melting point is -434.49 °F(−259.16°C) These are very cold temperatures!
Under a pressure of 1 atm, solid oxygen will sublime when heated. This is because the triple point of oxygen is at a pressure lower than 1 atm, so heating solid oxygen at 1 atm will cause it to bypass the liquid phase and transition directly to a gas.
Melting point:- oxygen: -218,79 0C- carbon dioxide: -56,6 oC- nitrogen: -210 oCBoiling point:- oxygen: -182,262 0C- nitrogen: -195,795 oC
Oxygen is a gas and does not have a melting point. Instead, oxygen transitions directly from a solid to a gas at a temperature of -218.4 degrees Celsius.
Oxygen cannot melt in the traditional sense because it is already in a gaseous state at room temperature and pressure. However, oxygen can be liquefied at very low temperatures of around -183 degrees Celsius. This process involves compressing and cooling the gas to condense it into a liquid state. Oxygen does not have a specific melting point like solids do, but it can undergo a phase change from gas to liquid under the right conditions.
Arsenic does melt, but has a very high melting point of 1503°F.
Oxygen has a lower point.
yes
a diamond's melting point is so highmagma will not melt it
The melting point of lithium is 180,54 0C.
Under 1 ATM of pressure, oxygen will not sublime or melt. Instead, it will remain in its gaseous state. Sublimation occurs when a substance transitions directly from a solid to a gas without passing through a liquid phase, which does not happen at 1 ATM for oxygen.