No, as heat is lost molecules move slower.
Atoms comprising a molecule move faster as heat increases.
No, heat makes the particles move faster. If you remove the heat the particles will start moving slower as it cools down.
Ozone is O3 Oxygen is O2 The less massive molecule O2 will move faster if subjected to the same force.
When you heat molecule you give them energy in form of motion.Lets take CO2 molecule. When you heat it its velocity increases. Particles start flying faster. Second thing that happens is that bonds O-C-O starts vibrate more rapidly and stronger (at some point thous vibrations can torn apart molecule)So two things happen to molecule when you heat them:You increase theyr velocityYou increase vibration of bondsthe molecules start moving faster.
heat
The object's temperature changes when heat is either added to or removed from it. When heat is added, the object's temperature increases as its molecules gain more energy and move faster. When heat is removed, the object's temperature decreases as its molecules lose energy and slow down.
I might be wrong, but I would say slower. If you mean energy in form of heat, molecules move slower if the liquid is colder, so if a liquid releases energy in form of heat (turns ¨cooler¨), than the molecules move slower. As I said, I might be wrong. Just my thoughts
A stable molecule is a molecule that does not move
If you mean something else, like- What can speed up a chemical reaction, that would be a catalyst. Or, you could say heat, though that is not an element.
yes
Heat is added to facilitate evaporation. As a liquid absorbs heat, its molecules gain energy and move faster, eventually reaching a point where they can overcome the intermolecular forces holding them together and escape into the gas phase.
heat which makes it move faster.