Solid, of course.
Vanadium is a solid metal at room temperature.
Vanadium does not react with water at room temperature or normal conditions. However, it can react with steam to form vanadium oxide and hydrogen gas.
The normal phase of polonium is solid. It is a rare, highly radioactive metal that exists in a solid form at room temperature.
At room temperature, no. It is solid.
Copper, like most metals, is solid during room temperature.
Vanadium is a solid metal at room temperature.
Hydrogen's normal phase is a gas at room temperature and pressure.
The normal phase of molybdenum is when it is at normal room temperature.
At room temperature scandium is a solid metal.
Vanadium does not react with water at room temperature or normal conditions. However, it can react with steam to form vanadium oxide and hydrogen gas.
Manganese is a metal, and is a solid at anything near room temperature.
The normal phase for boron is solid at room temperature.
Neon is a gas at room temperature.
The normal phase of vanadium has a magnetic susceptibility close to zero. Consider a long, thin vanadium cylinder with its axis parallel to an external magnetic field B? 0 in the +x-direction. At points far from the ends of the cylinder, by symmetry, all the magnetic vectors are parallel to the x-axis. :)
Antimony is a solid at room temperature. Chemical symbol of antimony is Sb. It is in the p group.
If normal phase means phase at room temperature, then holmium is a solid.
Vanadium is solid at room temperature.