Gallium is a metal that has a relatively low boiling point of about 2204 degrees Fahrenheit (1204 degrees Celsius), allowing it to boil faster compared to most other metals. It can even melt in your hand, as its melting point is around 85.58 degrees Fahrenheit (29.76 degrees Celsius). This unique property makes gallium interesting for various scientific and industrial applications.
It depends on what metal you're referring to. Mercury boils at 674 °F (357 °C). Tungsten boils at 10,706 °F (5,930 °C). Iron boils at 5,182 °F (2,862 °C).
Mercury itself is a liquid metal at room temperature. It boils at 356.7°C.
It depends on the metal. Water (H2O) boils at 215°c (100°f).
When a hot enough object meets water, some of the water boils instantly. As any substance boils it expands.
Mercury is the metal that has the lowest boiling point, which is around 2 degrees Celsius after melting.
Liquid neon boils at 27 degrees Kelvin, so no one's really sure how fast it expands.
Are you sure you got that right? No metal melts at 881.4, but sodium boils at 881.
Sodium (look up a video of the reaction before you do anything though)
no it is the molecules in the water moving fast and bumping into each other
metal dragonid
A thermometer measures the temperature of boiling water, while a stopwatch measures the time it takes for water to boil. These two instruments can be used together to calculate the rate at which water boils.
Yes it is. Metal Storm can fire up to 1 million rounds per minute, very fast.