Old blood, which is normal and very common.
Iodine is a grayish-black solid at room temperature and pressure. It sublimes into a purple gas without passing through a liquid phase. So, iodine gas is not brown or grey, but purple in color.
The color of solid iodine is a dark purple.
It is a grayish black solid metal usually exists in combination with other elements.
Iodine is a purple-black non metal that changes to a deep purple gas when heated.
Iodine is a solid nonmetal that gives off purple vapor when heated.
Click the solid purple box on the left and then click on the purple/white box. This will cause the solid purple box on top to knock off the red box....
Only if the color change is not permanent. Take Iodine for example (that's pronounced Eye-oh-deen), it is a solid metal that is grayish in color in its solid state, however in its gas state it's a purple or violet color. Once it reverts to its solid state, it turns gray again. This is a PHYSICAL property of Iodine. If the color changed permanently to something else, it would be a chemical change.
Purple is a secondary color resulting of the mixture of red and blue on equal amount. There are some variations of tones on the purple color. If you add white to purple you'll get the violet color, which has tonal variations as well.
it depends if u want it to be a solid color yes no then no
One element with four letters that is not solid at room temperature is iodine. It is a purple-black solid that sublimes into a purple gas at room temperature.
At room temperature, Magnesium is a grayish-silver solid metallic substance. It is very light in weight.
The three states of iodine are solid, liquid, and gas. At room temperature, iodine is a solid with a dark purple color. When heated, it sublimes directly from a solid to a purple-violet gas.