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.
it has a low melting point
Helium doesnt have any melting point as it cannot be a solid. Its boiling point is -268.93 °C
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.
Naphthalene has a relatively low melting point of around 80 degrees Celsius.
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.
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