Bromine and mercury are liquids at the room temperature.
Mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
No. The majority of known elements are solids. Only two known elements are liquid at room temperature.
There were 15 elements in my table that were liquids at room temperature.
any element can be a liquid but i presume you are talking about room temperature. at average room temperature there are only 2 (bromine and mecury) but at just above room temperature caesium, rubidium ,Francium and Gallium all become liquids
There are 11 elements that are liquids at room temperature. These are bromine, mercury, cesium, gallium, rubidium, francium, caesium, potassium, sodium, lithium, and... No other elements are liquids at room temperature.
The state of elements depends on the temperature. Most periodic tables give the state of the elements at room temperature. Since only mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature, these are the only elements listed as liquids on the periodic table.
Bromine and mercury are liquids at the room temperature.
no not all metallic are solid at room temperature.
most of the elements are solids at room temperature.
Yes. Bromine and mercury are the only 2 elements that exist as liquids at room temperature (25oC). However, there 4 other elements that exist as liquids at temperatures slighty above room temperature: * Francium at 27oC * Cesium at 28.6oC * Gallium at 30.3oC * Rubidium at 39.5oC
Mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
There were 15 elements in my table that were liquids at room temperature.
No. The majority of known elements are solids. Only two known elements are liquid at room temperature.
Only mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
Bromine, Br2, and mercury, Hg, are the only elements that are liquids at room temperature.
Of all the elements considered to be metalloids none of them are liquid at room temperature