Mercery is not solid at 20 degrees.
Any of the above based on the temperature. Solid at room temperature.
Since its melting point is 1064.18 degrees Celsius - it will solidify at any temperature below that !
Tungsten has the highest melting point of all metals
According to Modern Chemistry:the malleability and ductility of metals are possible because metallic bonding is the same in all directions throughout the solid. One plane of atoms in a metal can slide past another without encountering any resistance or breaking any bonds.
The phrase "sub degree" does not have any real meaning. At a sub 10000 degrees C temperature all metals would be molten and, being in liquid form, they cannot fracture.
Yes. All metals are always metals regardless of temperature. It's a solid at any temperature below 1984 degrees Fahrenheit (1084 Celsius or 1357 Kelvin)
Oxygen is a gas at room temperature and pressure, so it does not have malleability like solid metals do. Malleability is the ability of a material to be hammered or rolled into thin sheets without breaking, which is a property of solid metals.
There arent any. There arent any. There arent any.
Yttrium is a solid at room temperature, as are all metals apart from Mercury.
There is no metal in existence that is absorbent. Their solid, tight structure does not allow for any substance to be absorbed.
Any of the above based on the temperature. Solid at room temperature.
any material that will not allow electricity to pass through it. rubber, plastic, some electrically conductive materials are metals, esp. gold, water, neon gases insulators, glass, paper :)
The melting point is the temperature at which any solid turns into a liquid. For water, the temperature is 0 degrees C or 32 degrees F.
Freezing occurs without any change in temperature. A liquid at freezing temperature becomes a solid at freezing temperature.
Any of the ceramic like materials. Look to the up and to the right of the periodic table. Semi-metals and solid non metals would be good places to start.
there arent any
It depends on what the material is. H2O changes from solid to liquid at approximately zero degrees C. That is not the case for any other solid. For example, lead turns into a liquid at about 327.5 degrees C.