No. Not at anything like normal pressure.
Hydrogen becomes a solid at -434.5 degrees Fahrenheit
Yes, bromine is a solid at -5.00 degrees Celsius. Bromine has a melting point of -7.2 degrees Celsius, so at -5.00 degrees Celsius, it would be in its solid state.
Lead is a metal that is solid at 470 degrees Celsius. It has a melting point of 327.5 degrees Celsius, so it would be in its solid state at 470 degrees Celsius.
Hydrogen has a melting point of -259.16 degrees Celsius. At this temperature, hydrogen transitions from a solid to a liquid state.
At 100 degrees Celsius, lithium would be in a solid state. Lithium has a melting point of 180.5 degrees Celsius, so at 100 degrees Celsius it would still be a solid.
Rubidium is a solid at 25 degrees celsius. It has a melting point of 39.3 degrees celsius, so at 25 degrees celsius, it would be in a solid state.
Aluminum would be in a solid state at 210 degrees Celsius, as its melting point is 660.3 degrees Celsius.
Water freezes solid at 0 degrees Celsius, so it will still be solid at -24 degrees Celsius.
At 100 degrees Celsius, rubidium is a solid. Its melting point is 39.3 degrees Celsius, so at 100 degrees Celsius, rubidium would be in a solid state.
At 100 degrees Celsius, lithium is a solid. It has a melting point of 180.5 degrees Celsius, so at 100 degrees Celsius, it would still be in solid form.
At 25 degrees Celsius, rubidium is a solid. Rubidium has a melting point of 39.3 degrees Celsius, so at 25 degrees Celsius, it would be in its solid state.
Plutonium is a solid at 20 degrees Celsius. It has a melting point of 639.4 degrees Celsius and a boiling point of 3228 degrees Celsius, so at 20 degrees it would be in a solid state.