i think its about like -40 to -70 degress celsius if naked
When temperature decreases, a fluid will eventually freeze and become solid
he was a solid as a statue
Yes, except when the temperature is so cold that the fluids in the leaves freeze solid.
At the triple point for the substance. At that particular temperature and pressure you have solid, liquid and gas existing at the same time, so it will "boil" (become a vapor) and freeze (become a solid) at the same time.
It is put in a low temperature place(refrigerator?) therefore like water freezes and becomes solid.
Um... because watching things that normaly bounce shatter after you freeze them in LN2 is legen Wait for it dary
Liquids freeze because the particles have less energy so therefore becoming solid because the cannot spread as far apart. Liquids freeze when their particles have slowed down enough to "stick" together and form a solid structure. When the temperature--the average speed of particles--is low enough, liquids freeze into solids.
Freezing Temperature of water is 0 degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit and 273.15 KelvinIf you freeze water it will become ice which is solid
Freezing. It may seem strange, because things that 'freeze' are not necessarily cold, but the temperature at which something becomes a solid is its 'freezing point'.
a solid expands by heat because if you decrees the temperature it will make it freeze and if it is warmer it will expand
Simply, the melting point. Think of an ice cube. The melting point is the temperature at which the ice cube MELTS into a liquid.
Yes, petroleum freezes solid at a sufficiently low temperature. In fact, there is only one substance which does not have a solid phase, which is helium. Helium exists only as a gas or a liquid. But everything else will freeze if sufficiently cooled.