Ice
Ice melts into water, wax melts into liquid, and metal expands when heated.
No
The change of state that occurs when lead is heated and turns into a liquid is called melting.
It would first change from a solid to a liquid.
The change of state is melting. When a candle wax is heated, it transitions from a solid state to a liquid state.
Molecules move faster when heated -- no matter what state they're in.
When sulfur is heated, it undergoes a phase change from solid to liquid, and then from liquid to gas due to sublimation. Sulphur does not undergo a direct change from solid to gas.
Yes if it is heated.
The change of state that occurs when osmium is heated from 4000°C to 6000°C is sublimation. Osmium sublimes directly from a solid to a gas without passing through a liquid phase.
A physical change is a change only in physical meaning that Original things can be get after it Eg Water change into ice . Water can be get if heated.
Uranium changes state as any other material does. We know uranium is a metal, and it can be heated and melted, or heated even more and vaporized. It is the same process that might be used on iron or aluminum.
Ice (solid water) changes to liquid water when heated. Wax solid changes to liquid wax when heated. Metal becomes molten when heated to its melting point. Paraffin wax solid changes to liquid paraffin wax when heated.