Yes, at high temperatures the metal will boil and vaporize into its gas state of matter
A solid turns into a liquid at its melting point.
The relative temperature at which a group of solids change into liquids is known as relative melting point. As heat increases, the solid slowly changes its state as it melts. Melting of ice to water is an example for melting point.
Technically all of them... They all have a point at which they turn to liquid, it is just usually very hot. The only metal that is liquid at room temperature is mercury (Hg) but it is not in the position specified. The element you specified is called platinum but it's melting point is 2042.1K (1869ish C I believe)
Molten zinc or gallium will turn cold when you put a penny in it because they have a lower melting point than the metal in the penny, causing the penny to rapidly transfer its heat to the liquid metal and cool down.
Ice turns into liquid when it absorbs enough heat energy to break its molecular bonds and transition from a solid state to a liquid state. This process is known as melting and occurs at the melting point of ice, which is 0 degrees Celsius.
Melting
we have to get fire and get metal on it.it will be changed in to liquid
The melting point of a mixture is the temperature at which the solid components of the mixture turn into a liquid.
When solid start to turn into liquid its melting point. When liquid start turning into solid its freezing point.
Lead is a metal element that is typically a solid at room temperature. It has a melting point of 621.5 degrees Fahrenheit (327.5 degrees Celsius) and a boiling point of 3180 degrees Fahrenheit (1749 degrees Celsius). While lead can become a liquid when heated to its melting point, it is not naturally a liquid at standard room temperature and pressure.
A solid turns into a liquid at its melting point.
It will bend eventually because u have heated it up so much it wouldn't be able to function It becomes molten like the lava in the earth.
The relative temperature at which a group of solids change into liquids is known as relative melting point. As heat increases, the solid slowly changes its state as it melts. Melting of ice to water is an example for melting point.
Technically all of them... They all have a point at which they turn to liquid, it is just usually very hot. The only metal that is liquid at room temperature is mercury (Hg) but it is not in the position specified. The element you specified is called platinum but it's melting point is 2042.1K (1869ish C I believe)
No. At room temperature cesium is a solid, though it will melt on a hot day.
Molten zinc or gallium will turn cold when you put a penny in it because they have a lower melting point than the metal in the penny, causing the penny to rapidly transfer its heat to the liquid metal and cool down.
Metal can melt if hot enough. Lightning is certainly hot enough to "burn" metal to a melting point, if lightning were applied somehow continuously to the metal over a period of time, I think it could work. Question being, what you would do then with melted metal. could you use the lightning to move the melted liquid?