for A+ true
yes
Yes
No, because fire is buring gases. If the gases were frozen (therefore solids), it wouldn't make fire.
Technically yes. The melting point and freezing point of every liquid (for the particular element) is the same; it is the point when the element is shifting from or to state of equilibrium, depending on the direction of energy movement.
because it is a particle that is frozen in
Frozen milk has more mass than non frozen milk because of how liquids freeze. If you think of it, solids have more mass than liquids because of how tightly packed the molecules are. Just like water, frozen milk will have a larger mass than non-frozen milk.
Yes, Jupiter's frozen gases are in a solid state, primarily in the form of ice crystals. These frozen gases include ammonia, water, methane, and other compounds that have condensed at the cold temperatures found in the outer regions of Jupiter's atmosphere.
Liquids are made when gas particles move closer together. Solids are made when liquid particles move even more closely together resulting in something along the lines of a frozen block of ice.
My opinion on this question, is that gases may come off the bottle, maybe even liquids, if the bottle is frozen enough, solids may drop off it as well.
Freezing does not change the mass of a liquid. Its density may change, however. Most solids are denser than their liquid phase. Frozen water, i.e. ice, is less dense, and so floats.
Crystallography is the experimental science of determining the arrangement of atoms in solids. The word "crystallography" is derived from the Greek words crystallon= cold drop / frozen drop, with its meaning extending to all solids with some degree of transparency, and graphein = writ.
The element neon has no hardness on either moh's hardness scale or rockwell scale unless it is frozen. These scales measure only solids.