Yes. A solid presumably has mass, which is equivalent to energy according to the relation E=mc2. It is sometimes said that "Matter is frozen energy". This would include solids.
-- It could become just a warmer solid. -- If it gains enough heat energy, the solid could melt, becoming liquid. -- Depending on the ambient pressure, the solid could also sublime, becoming gas.
Yes. The energy is what keeps a liquid moving. Removing all or most of the energy (by reducing the temperature) - slows the atoms to the point that they become a solid mass.
Like anything else, it cools. When enough energy is removed, it will freeze and become a solid.
Well let's say that the gas is water vapour. For it to become a solid, it must first become a liquid. It does this by being cooled (it condenses) which makes it lose energy, slowing down the vibration of the particles. When it solidifies, the particles vibrate even slower, losing their energy. So here's your answer- it does neither, it just loses energy.
A solid is as solid as solid gets. Liquids freeze and become solids. Solids become denser solids.
To become a solid, a liquid will absorb heat energy.
The things that happens to the energy level of solid as it become liquid water is that the liquid has more energy than solid do. Simple as that! BY: ANONYMOUS :)
-- It could become just a warmer solid. -- If it gains enough heat energy, the solid could melt, becoming liquid. -- Depending on the ambient pressure, the solid could also sublime, becoming gas.
this process is the process of gaining thermal energy. As any matter changes state from solid to any other form it will require energy. As energy is exerted on the solid perssure or electric or thermal or other type, the solid will obsorb the energy and change state. The solid thereby will in turn and at a ratio, increase the thermal energy it consumes.
Yes. The energy is what keeps a liquid moving. Removing all or most of the energy (by reducing the temperature) - slows the atoms to the point that they become a solid mass.
Nuclear energy. Me-No no no I meant like non-liquid but liquid and solid and when it can become a beam.
It is actually neither. The liquid state going to a solid, like water to ice is a combination of the realsed and absorbed energy. The water absorbeds oxygen to become a solid whilst at the same time it relased carbon dyoxyed to become ice.
Like anything else, it cools. When enough energy is removed, it will freeze and become a solid.
It is actually neither. The liquid state going to a solid, like water to ice is a combination of the realsed and absorbed energy. The water absorbeds oxygen to become a solid whilst at the same time it relased carbon dyoxyed to become ice.
Well let's say that the gas is water vapour. For it to become a solid, it must first become a liquid. It does this by being cooled (it condenses) which makes it lose energy, slowing down the vibration of the particles. When it solidifies, the particles vibrate even slower, losing their energy. So here's your answer- it does neither, it just loses energy.
By heating the internal energy of a solid increase what leads to melting when the crystalline system is destroyed and the solid become a liquid.
Solid turns into liquid through a process called melting. Melting occurs when the temperature of a solid increases and reaches its melting point. At this point, the thermal energy breaks the bonds holding the particles in the solid together, causing them to move more freely. As a result, the solid's rigid structure breaks down, and it transforms into a liquid form.