You think probable to a glass.
Some do while others do not. To be solid a substance must merely have a melting point that is above room temperature. Gallium has a melting point just above room temperature, so it is normally solid but it will melt in the palm of your hand. By contrast Tungsten has such a high melting point that not even the hottest lava from Earth's volcanoes can come close to melting it.
A low melting point means that a substance will change from a solid to a liquid at a relatively low temperature. This can affect the substance's physical properties, making it easier to melt and work with at lower temperatures.
Helium doesnt have any melting point as it cannot be a solid. Its boiling point is -268.93 °C
it has a low melting point
Gallium is a solid at room temperature. It is a post transition metals, and like all metals expect mercury, is a solid at room temperature. However, among the metals, gallium has a very low melting point.
That depends on the solid: ice has a very low melting point, lard and butter have low melting points, chocolate has a relatively low melting point, wax has an intermediate melting point, lead has a high melting point, iron has a very high melting point, tungsten has an extremely high melting point.
molecular
molecular solid
Cesium is a solid at room temperature but has a low melting point.
The metal lead. Solid at room temps, low melting point, good conductor of heat and electricity.
At STP, neon is a gas, so its melting point is low whereas silicon is a solid, so its melting point is high
Tin is a metal,it exist in solid form. It have a low melting temperature of 232 C (449.47 F).
Salt: white granular solid, high melting point, tastes salty. Sugar: white granular solid, low melting point, tastes sweet.
This is acetic acid, a molecular solid. The low melting point indicates that it's not a network atomic solid or ionic solid, and the fact that it forms crystals rules out metals and amorphous soilds.
Naphthalene has a relatively low melting point of around 80 degrees Celsius.
Some do while others do not. To be solid a substance must merely have a melting point that is above room temperature. Gallium has a melting point just above room temperature, so it is normally solid but it will melt in the palm of your hand. By contrast Tungsten has such a high melting point that not even the hottest lava from Earth's volcanoes can come close to melting it.
It has a melting point of 113 degrees celieus