Yes, petroleum freezes solid at a sufficiently low temperature. In fact, there is only one substance which does not have a solid phase, which is helium. Helium exists only as a gas or a liquid. But everything else will freeze if sufficiently cooled.
The temperature affecting the liquid must have been below freezing for the liquid to turn into a solid.
It depends on the temperature, however, at standard and room temperature, copper is a solid.
To turn from a solid to a liquid it must reach it's melting point by heating up. Examples: ice to water, rocks to magma. Every thing melts at a different temperature.
32 Degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius Below this temperature H2O will remain in a solid form, above this temperature H2O will be in a liquid form.
The cause of a liquid turning into a solid is that the molecules from a liquid start to decrease because of the temperature dropping lower until the molecules are squeezed together and hold a shape.
Any liquid can turn into a solid at the correct temperature.
22700C
The temperature affecting the liquid must have been below freezing for the liquid to turn into a solid.
100 degrees C
Solid ice starts to turn to liquid water a 0 degrees Celsius.
0 degrees C
ice is a solid and a liquid so if u put ice in room temperature you can just watch it melt and it will turn into a liquid because its not in a cold temperature
turn down the temperature increase pressure
The temperature at which they turn back into solid, depends on what type of fat your talking about
-114 degrees C
A solid will turn into a liquid if the temperature get hot enough. There are different temperatures for different solids, so you might have to check.
Depending on the nature of the liquid, the volume, the temperature, the exposedarea of the liquid, the purity, etc.