Everything that has been in the room for a long enough time to reach thermal equilibrium will be at the same temperature, including wood. So if room temp. is 70 F then the wood is 70 F.
Helium, as it's gas at room temperature.
A diamond at room temperature will generally be at the same temperature as the room.
room temperature
Yes, radon is a gas at room temperature.
propanone is liquid at room temperature
Wood shutter blinds regulate room temperature better than blinds build of metal. There is almost no difference in light regulation.
Helium, as it's gas at room temperature.
Metal is a good conductor of heat, whereas wood is a poor conductor of heat. When you touch room-temperature metal, it draws heat from your skin faster than room-temperature wood does, so it feels cold. As was stated above, this only holds for chairs that are at a lower temperature (say, room temperature) than your skin temperature. If the chairs were at a higher temperature than your skin temperature (say, 100 degrees Fahrenheit), the metal would transfer heat to your skin faster than the wood would transfer heat, so the metal chair would feel hotter than the wood chair.
If the room temperature is cooler then you are. it is because metal is a good conductor of heat. When you put your hand on the metal it immediately starts to draw heat away from your hand this gives you the impression that it is cooling you, which it is. If you do the same with a piece of wood it is not able to draw the heat away from you be cause it is a reasonable insulator.
Yes, absolutely.
White glue is strongest at room temperature when applied to moderately porous wood surfaces. It does not adhere well on shiny wood surfaces.
The room temperature is...the room temperature !!
The temperature of the nitrogen at room temperature is whatever the temperature of the room is.
A diamond at room temperature will generally be at the same temperature as the room.
Room temperature IS room temperature, you question makes no sense.
room temperature
I would recommend that you store it at room temperature. If it gets to cold and goes to a hot room it can mess up the wood and the strings will be majorly out of tune.