The melting temperature of a substance is dependent upon the pressure and specific volume.
The melting temperature of liquid at standard pressure of 1atm (~100kPa) is 0 degrees Celsius.
601K
328 degrees Celsius
622.4 degress Fahrenheit
its a solid my friend
It would change from a solid to a liquid.
That depends upon temperature and pressure. At room temperature and sea level pressures, most waxes are solid or if you melt it it turns in to a liquid but if you put it at 100 degrees it turns in to gas.
Any liquid can be -100 degrees celsius.
Water's freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius, so anything below that is a solid. Water's boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius, so anything between 0 and 100 would be a liquid, and anything above 100 would be a gas.
Water Vapour cannot immediately become solid, first it has to condense into a liquid as it drops below a temperature of 100 degrees centigrade, once it has dropped below a temperature of 0 degrees centigrade it then undergoes a process called freezing which is it condensing into a solid state. It is also the only known compound which is less dense in it's Solid State than in it's Liquid State
100 degrees C
Water is a solid when it's 0 degrees Celsius or lower and a liquid at 0 degrees Celsius or higher and when it is 100 degrees Celsius it turns in to a gas
Water changes state from liquid to solid when it reaches a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a simple example of changing from liquid to solid, or freezing.
Water is liquid at temperatures between 0 and 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Below is solid and above is gaseous.
It would change from a solid to a liquid.
That depends upon temperature and pressure. At room temperature and sea level pressures, most waxes are solid or if you melt it it turns in to a liquid but if you put it at 100 degrees it turns in to gas.
At 50 degrees Celsius, water is liquid. It boils and becomes gas at 100 degrees Celsius, and freezes and becomes solid at 0 degrees Celsius.
Any liquid can be -100 degrees celsius.
Water's freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius, so anything below that is a solid. Water's boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius, so anything between 0 and 100 would be a liquid, and anything above 100 would be a gas.
H2O is commonly found in three states of matter: solid, liquid, and as a gas. When H2O is cooled below 32 degrees Fahrenheit, under normal atmospheric pressure, it becomes a solid (Ice). Between 32 and 212 degrees Fahrenheit, it will be found as a liquid (Water). Finally, when H2O is heated above 212 degrees Fahrenheit, and under normal atmospheric pressure, it will become a gas (Water Vapor, commonly referred to as Steam). In conclusion, H2O is both a solid, a liquid, and a gas, depending on what temperature and pressure it is under.
The answer depends on the substance. Some substances will be solid, some liquid and some gas.
"Melting" is the point at which a solid becomes a liquid. Ice will become water at anything above 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius, for instance. "Boiling" is the point at which a liquid becomes a gas. Water will turn to steam (as it boils) above 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius. boiling is when you give fire and melting is when you turn something into liquid.