That depends on the metal.
Mercury is liquid at room temperature (melting point -39° C)
Tin has a melting point of a few hundred degrees (melting point 232° C)
Titanium melts at over a thousand degrees (melting point - 1668° C)
Tungsten with the highest melting point of the metal elements melts at 3422 °C
yes. if the flash light produces enough heat
It depends on what the metal is. Different materials have different specific heats and will take various amount of energy to heat up. You need to find the specific heat of the metal used. Use Q=CmT Q=amount of energy C=specific heat m=mass T=change in temp
Yes, it is possible to melt a coin as most coins are made of metal. However, it is not recommended to do so as destroying currency is illegal in many countries. Additionally, the melting point of the metal will determine how easy or difficult it is to melt the coin.
The heat required to melt ice is called the heat of fusion, which is 334 J/g. To melt 500g of ice, you would need 334 J/g x 500g = 167000 joules of heat.
To calculate the heat needed to melt a block of ice at its melting point, you need to know the mass of the ice block, the specific heat capacity of ice, and the heat of fusion of ice (or latent heat of fusion). The formula to calculate this heat is Q = m * ΔHf, where Q is the heat energy, m is the mass, and ΔHf is the heat of fusion.
Its melting point is -69.9 degrees Fahrenheit.
No, a Bunsen burner does not produce enough heat to melt silver, which has a high melting point of 961.8 degrees Celsius. You would need a hotter heat source such as a torch specifically designed for melting metal.
No you need heat to melt cheese, tomatoes do not possess enough heat unless you burn them.
you need to melt metal
no duck tape would melt with the heat of the engine and you would need metal supports so the duck tape doesn't cave in on you
No, Plastic is not conductive! I other words plastic can not conduct electricity therefore it can not produce resistance, and resistance is what you need to produce heat. and that heat would melt the plastic. Now if you touch a "live" wire to metal and that metal was grounded ( for example to a cold water pipe) then you would be completing the circuit, then that piece of metal would heat up very rapidly and eventually melt! of-course the smart person would not do this but if you where not so smart be prepared to get burned!!!! BE SMART!!
yes. if the flash light produces enough heat
Melting is an exothermic process; we need heat for melting.
It depends on what the metal is. Different materials have different specific heats and will take various amount of energy to heat up. You need to find the specific heat of the metal used. Use Q=CmT Q=amount of energy C=specific heat m=mass T=change in temp
The heat needed to melt a substance is given by the formula: Q = m * Lf, where Q is the heat, m is the mass, and Lf is the specific latent heat of fusion. For water, Lf is 334 kJ/kg. Plugging in the values, you would need 2.50 kg * 334 kJ/kg ≈ 835 kJ to melt 2.50 kg of water at its melting point.
Yes, it is possible to melt a coin as most coins are made of metal. However, it is not recommended to do so as destroying currency is illegal in many countries. Additionally, the melting point of the metal will determine how easy or difficult it is to melt the coin.
Taps need not be made with metal.... But most taps are because they don't melt if hot water passes through............