bob
metal is a solid that expands when heated also of course when liquids are heated and change state into a gas they expand but metal is cool because it expands before it changes state
Because liquids have two types of expansions i.e Apparent Expansion and Real Expansion
Solid,Liquids,Gases expand when heated. Heat makes the particle attraction low hence the space between the particles increase and the thing expand. The expansion is the increase in the moleculer space of substances.
The higher the density, the faster the sound. Solids, then liquids, then gasses.
bob
All of them can expand - for example, when they are heated. Gases usually expand more than solids or liquids.
metal is a solid that expands when heated also of course when liquids are heated and change state into a gas they expand but metal is cool because it expands before it changes state
Solid, liquid and gas will expand on heating. One exception is water that expands on being heated, and on being frozen into solid ice.
I assume your question deals with expansion in volume under conditions of heating and / or cooling. I believe that most liquids expand in volume when they are heated and contract in volume when they are cooled. Water does not follow this pattern entirely - it expands when it is cooled from a liquid state to a solid state.
Because liquids have two types of expansions i.e Apparent Expansion and Real Expansion
The solid will expand.
Solids ---heat---> Liquids ---more heat---> gases
A solid can change Into a liquid when it is heated Example- when heated solid chocolate, the chocolate changes into a liquid. A liquid Can change into a solid when it is cooled Example - If you leave juice in the freezer , the liquid changes into a solid.
Solid,Liquids,Gases expand when heated. Heat makes the particle attraction low hence the space between the particles increase and the thing expand. The expansion is the increase in the moleculer space of substances.
A substance in the solid phase will typically expand when heated. Most substances when heated sufficiently will melt into a liquid, assuming that they do not combust or sublimate.
yes