We all know that glass at STP is a very very slow moving LIQUID.
When I recently asked a teacher of mine whet the melting point was he gave
me an answer that was well above room temperature. When heard this I was
shocked and I was told to find out what the melting point was since "I
knew everything." I think the melting point is somewhere around 100 Kelvin.
If some one would be kind enough to shed some light on the actual temperature
I would be very grateful.
yours truly,
"lost"
liquid, a very slow moving one though.
Glass is not considered viscous at room temperature. It is a solid material that does not flow or deform over time like a viscous liquid would.
No, iron is a solid at room temperature.
Glass is considered a solid at room temperature, even though it may appear to flow slowly over long periods of time.
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.
Polonium is a solid, man-made, radioactive poor metal.
Glass is not considered viscous at room temperature. It is a solid material that does not flow or deform over time like a viscous liquid would.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
It depends on the temperature. For instance, Mercury is a liquid at room temperature. Gold is solid at room temperature.
Titanium is a solid at room temperature.
No, coconut milk is not solid at room temperature. It is a liquid that remains in a liquid state at room temperature.
it is liquid at room temprature
Boron is a solid at room temperature
Calcium is a solid in room temperature
Ethanol is a liquid at room temperature.
propanone is liquid at room temperature
At room temperature, sulfur is a solid.Yellow solid in room temperature.
Germanium is a solid at room temperature.