No, they vibrate faster.
Particles vibrate faster when they are heated.
The particles in a solid start to move faster and faster as they are heated. Eventually they may move fast and freely enough to reach the liquid state, and if they continue to be heated, the particles could obtain enough energy to leave the liquid state and go into the gaseous state.
Particles will move faster when heated and slower when cooled.This is the reason that solid objects grow larger when heated. The particles are moving so fast they are making ti expand. Paragraph by -- Kira2k
All states of matter have vibrating particles, but solids' particles vibrate only.
The particles in a solid move around one point.
Particles vibrate faster when they are heated.
Not to my knowledge, they only vibrate if they are heated
They vibrate. And if heated enough, most connections will be broken and the object will be melted.
The particles in a liguid are bonded (not as strongly as a solid which is why it flows.) when it is heated the particles vibrate and eventually the bonds break and the particles break away. This is evaporation.
In a solid, the particles start to vibrate a lot.In a liquid, the particles begin to move around faster and faster.In a gas, the particles move extremely fast through the air.
They begin to vibrate more quickly when a liquid is heated, it will evaporate. ie. the liquid will turn to vapour (gas). if the vapour i s collected, it will turn back to the liquid again once it is cooled (condensation) muck love, kate
No, the vibrations depend on how much energy the particles have. If a solid is heated from the left side, the particles on the left will vibrate more than the particles on the right. Solid particles vibrate as each individual particle, not as a group or around a fixed point.
because the particles of the compound, called atoms, vibrate more when heated and then when cooled the
the atoms move much slower than in liquids, gases, and plasmas.
They cause the particles around them to be pushed together and then spread apart.
The molecules that make up the rock vibrate faster, with greater velocity.
The individual particles vibrate/move faster. The matter as a whole expands.