Not only liquids but also solids expand as they get hotter, with few exceptions.
expand
No. Most materials expand when they get hotter. A notable exception is water between 0 and 4 degrees centigrade.No. Most materials expand when they get hotter. A notable exception is water between 0 and 4 degrees centigrade.No. Most materials expand when they get hotter. A notable exception is water between 0 and 4 degrees centigrade.No. Most materials expand when they get hotter. A notable exception is water between 0 and 4 degrees centigrade.
Most liquids will expand when the temperature is increased. This is because the increase in temperature causes the molecules in the liquid to move faster and spread out, resulting in an increase in volume.
The liquid turns into a solid. Er, not generally. As they get hotter, most liquids tend to evaporate!
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.
No only water it's the odd one.
Get horny/expand
Yes. liquids expand. If we heat the beaker which is filled with water using a candle, the volume will rise as the water is mixed with hot air. Hot air would want to excape, therefore liquids do expand.
No, liquids do not always expand uniformly with temperature. Generally, liquids expand as they are heated, but the expansion may not be uniform due to factors such as the specific properties of the liquid and the conditions under which it is heated.
Liquids expand when heated and contractwhen cooled.
yES IT DOES
All liquids expand on heating (apart from water between 0oC to 4oC)