The incipient melting point refers to how metal is heated. It is the point just before the metal reaches its melting point.
That depends on the solid: ice has a very low melting point, lard and butter have low melting points, chocolate has a relatively low melting point, wax has an intermediate melting point, lead has a high melting point, iron has a very high melting point, tungsten has an extremely high melting point.
Melting point of Gold = 1064.18 °C Melting point of Silver = 961.78 °C Melting point of Copper = 1084.62 °C Of cause an alloy of all three would probably have a eutectic melting behavour
what is the melting point of ice on top of the Himalayan
The melting point is between 3652 and 3697 degrees C. The boiling point is 4200 degrees C.
The melting point of polyethylene glycol 6000 is approximately 50-52°C.
This is the melting point.
The term defined as the temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid state is called the melting point.
The melting point is the temperature at which a solid substance transitions to a liquid state. The drop melting point is a method of determining the melting point where a small amount of the substance is heated until it melts and then allowed to drop onto a solid surface to observe the melting point. Drop melting point is often used when the substance being tested has a high melting point or when observing the melting process is critical.
The temperature at which a solid melts is called the melting point. At this temperature, the solid transitions into a liquid state.
What is the melting point of tar?
what is lpgs melting point
The melting point of bromine is -7,2 0C. The melting point of chlorine is -101,5 0C.
NaCl has the highest melting point (between NaCl and H2O)
The polonium melting point is 254 0C.
Hey, what is the melting point temperature?OrHouston's weather is like the melting point temperature?
Celsius is a measure of temperature not a substance, and therefore it has no melting point. What is the melting point of what material in Celsius? [You haven't named the substance you want the melting point of/for]