yes
yes the melting point of solid and freezing point of liquid of a substance is differ but in the case of water the melting and freezing point is same.
Boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid changes into a gas. Freezing point is the temperature at which a liquid changes into a solid.
melting point and/or freezing point (they mean the same thing/are the same temperature)
The freezing point of water in Celsius is 0 degrees Celsius. The freezing point in Fahrenheit is 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
The freezing point and melting point of a substance are both defined as the temperature at which liquid and solid phases of the substance can remain together at equilibrium.
Solids changing to liquids are melting Liquids changing to solids are freezing Solids changing to gas are subliming Liquids changing to gas are boiling Gases changing to liquids are condensing.
The name of the phase of turning liquids into solids is the freezing point. It is called solidification. :)
The temperature will be either the boiling point (if liquid and vapor is present) or it will be the melting/freezing point (if liquid and ice is present)
When a liquid cools past the freezing point for that substance it begins to form crystalline solids. This is an exothermic process that is commonly called simply, freezing.
Besides water, bismuth, silicon, gallium, antimony and germanium also form solids that are less dense than the liquid at the freezing point. All of these substances are less dense because the lattice structure of the solid is less dense than the random spacing present in the liquid at the freezing point.
The addition of some solids can lower the freezing point of a liquid, a principle used when salt is applied to melt ice on frozen surfaces. (Britanicca Encyclopedia)
No it would be the boiling point. At freezing point it becomes solid
effect of pressure and impurties on the freezing and boiling point of liquids
The molecules present in the solids are tightly packed, while liquid has loosely packed molecules. Hence while meting solids they co-exist and show up as higher density than pure liquid.
No, it is the melting point. Ice changes to water when it melts, not when it boils.
yes the melting point of solid and freezing point of liquid of a substance is differ but in the case of water the melting and freezing point is same.
There are three states of matter: gas, liquid and solid. The melting point is where a solid turns to liquid. The freezing point is where a liquid turns to solid.