No, carbon dioxide can occur naturally as a solid (dry ice), liquid (when compressed), and gas (in the atmosphere). Mercury is another substance that naturally exists as a solid, liquid, and gas under different temperature conditions.
Metals occur naturally in solid state.
No, magnetite is not a liquid. It is a naturally occurring mineral that is a solid form of iron oxide with magnetic properties.
Crude oil is a liquid. It is a naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbons that is extracted from the ground in liquid form.
Dry ice, which is solid carbon dioxide, can form naturally in space. It can occur on objects like comets or asteroids where carbon dioxide is present and temperatures are extremely cold, causing the gas to freeze directly into solid form without passing through a liquid state.
Halogens naturally occur in the gaseous state. Examples of halogens are fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, and astatine.
No, carbon dioxide can occur naturally as a solid (dry ice), liquid (when compressed), and gas (in the atmosphere). Mercury is another substance that naturally exists as a solid, liquid, and gas under different temperature conditions.
Metals occur naturally in solid state.
Solid.
Caffeine doesn't evaporate, it sublimes at 178 Celius, which means that it goes directly from solid to gas...not from solid to liquid to gas.
The solid is dissociated in ions.
At room temperature protactinium is a solid metal.
at room temp it is a solid... but it can be made into a liquid or gas if heated as with anything,,, but naturally seen as a solid.
Solid
Melting occur when a solid starts to be a liquid.
Any substance can be a liquid, solid or gas, provided it has the right amount of energy; water is the only one to naturally occur in all three states on Earth, though.
at room temp it is a solid... but it can be made into a liquid or gas if heated as with anything,,, but naturally seen as a solid.