Yes, carbon dioxide will liquify under high pressure.
Water turns milky.
It turns into a gas not a liquid
Lime water is a clear and colourless liquid, but when exposed to Carbon Dioxide, lime water turns into a milky solution.
It turns to its natral state, Carbon dioxide
When a deer dies, it eventually decomposes and turns into bacteria in the ground and sends carbon dioxide into the air.
The physical change that is happening is called sublimation. Sublimation is when a solid (snow) directly turns into a gas (carbon dioxide) without passing through the liquid state.
Dry ice is the solid form of carbon dioxide, not frozen nitrogen. When carbon dioxide gas is compressed and cooled, it turns directly into a solid without passing through a liquid phase, resulting in dry ice.
Plants use the carbon dioxide to make food.
Carbon dioxide is a colorless gas.
Lime water turns milky when CO2 (carbon dioxide) is passed thru it. So to test if a given liquid is lime water, then pass CO2 thru it, if it turns milky, d liquid is lime water...
Compounds do not get a new name when they change physical state. Carbon dioxide's name in the liquid state in just "liquid carbon dioxide"
Carbon dioxide gas turns lime water milky white by forming insoluble calcium carbonate when added to it. This reaction is commonly used as a test for the presence of carbon dioxide.