yes it can do you know how. how is because it is like,mass you know what mass is . its like all around you but yes liquid everywhere.
Yes, in a liquid, the particles can move past each other, allowing them to change places. This movement is what gives liquids their ability to flow and take the shape of their container.
Solids do not flow. The particles in a solid cannot change places so a solid will keep its shape (unless it is broken).
When a solid is heated its particles melts and change into liquid
When a solid is heated its particles melts and change into liquid
Particles are close but disorganized will change from gaseous state to liquid form. Once in liquid form the particles will spread out.
The energy between particles. The particles must be heated so that there is no forces of attraction, therefore the solids particles can loosen into liquid particles and the liquids particles can loosen into gas, the heat energy is used to make the particles move faster
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Decreasing the temperature of a liquid makes the particles that make up the liquid slow down and become more packed together. This causes liquids to change to solids (freezing point).
As particles change state from solid to liquid, they gain energy that allows them to overcome the forces holding them in a fixed position. In a solid, particles are tightly packed and vibrate in fixed positions. As heat is added to the system, particles in the solid gain enough energy to break free of their fixed positions and move more freely, resulting in the transition to a liquid state.
energy between particles
Particles become less organized when they change state from a solid to a liquid. In a solid, particles are arranged in a specific pattern and vibrate in place, but in a liquid, the particles have more freedom to move around and do not have a fixed position.
This physical change is called melting.