Yes. Only Mercury and Bromine are liquid elements at room temperature and pressure.
the three metals are Francium, Mercury and Bromine
Mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
Mercury and bromine are the only two elements liquid at room temperature.
Water and mercury are two elements that are liquid at room temperature.
Yes. Only Mercury and Bromine are liquid elements at room temperature and pressure.
the three metals are Francium, Mercury and Bromine
There are two elements which are liquid at room temperature and they are Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br). Copernicium (Cn) might be liquid at room temperature but chemists are not sure about it.
Mercury and Bromine
Bromine (Br) is a liquid at room temperature. It has a Melting Point of -7.3C and Boiling Point of 58.78C.
These would be bromine (Br) and mercury (Hg).
The only two elements that are liquid at standard conditions(32 degrees Fahrenheit, and 1 Atmosphere pressure) are both metals, they are bromine and Mercury. Gallium melts to a liquid at just above room temperature( it melts in your hand!) but it doesn't make the cutoff
Bromine, Mercury
Bromine, Mercury
All elements can exist as liquids at some temperature or other. At standard room temperature, only bromine and mercury are liquid. However, gallium has a melting point of only 29.76 degrees C (85.57 degrees F) which is not far above standard room temperature, and can occur naturally in some places.
Mercury and bromine are liquids at room temperature.
Nonmetals can be solid, liquid or gaseous.