No, iron is a solid at room temperature.
No, helium is a gas at room temperature.
Heat flows from the liquid at room temperature to the ice, in order to melt the ice and bring it to the same temperature as the liquid.
At room temperature (about 20-25°C), elements can exist in various physical states. Most elements are solids at room temperature, such as carbon, iron, and aluminum. Some elements are gases, like oxygen and nitrogen, while a few are liquids, such as mercury and bromine.
Liquid, silly.
The phase change from solid iron to liquid iron occurs due to the increase in temperature, which imparts enough energy to the iron atoms to overcome the forces holding them in a rigid solid structure. As the temperature rises, the atoms gain enough kinetic energy to break free from their fixed positions and move more freely, causing the solid iron to transition into a liquid state.
Like all ionic compounds iron chloride is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature, mercury is liquid, iron is solid.
Iron nails are a solid
It's a solid.
Iron can be a solid, liquid, or gas because it is an element and elements can become all the forms of matter
Mercury
Like all ionic compounds iron chloride is a solid at room temperature.
Uranium, gold, iron and aluminum are solid metals at room temperature. Neon is a gas.
It is a gasxx
It means whether the substance in question is solid, liquid or gas at normal room temperature, so you could assume that about 20 degrees celsius. Oxygen is a gas at room temperature Water is a liquid at room temperature Iron is a solid at room temperature.
solid. Very stable at room temperature.
Oils are liquid triglycerides, at room temperature that is.