Carbon dioxide is released.
Water vapors and sulfur dioxide are released.
It means it is heated so that it gets liquid.
Copper is a solid at room temperature, that being said, if heated to its melting point, copper will become a liquid.
To separate copper from its ore, the process is called smelting. The copper and ore are heated and the copper turns to liquid which is then poured from the smelter.
Yes if it is heated.
sort of all of them, as when heated it can be a liquid or gas and when frozen it is a solid
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.
Carbon dioxide is released.
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.
it must be heated to before it can be made into something because copper is a solid form at room temperature if you were to put it into a liquid for it would be easier to form, such as a square, or a triangle.
When magnesium is heated, it undergoes a chemical reaction with oxygen in the air, resulting in the release of a gas called magnesium oxide (MgO).
No. Copper carbonate is a compound. As a rule of thumb if a substance has a two-part name it is probably not an element unless one of those word refers to its state (i.e. solid, liquid, gas, vapor)