yes
Freezing is the process where a substance changes from a liquid to a solid by extracting heat energy. So, freezing actually involves the removal of thermal energy from a substance rather than adding thermal energy.
When thermal energy isreleased by the substance, it creates condensation and freezing process.
Freezing involves releasing thermal energy, which is removed from the substance being frozen. This causes the temperature of the substance to decrease until it reaches its freezing point, at which point it solidifies.
Thermal.
Yes. When ice is converted to water, thermal energy is required. When the water is converted back to ice, the same amount of thermal energy is released.
its loses thermal energy...
Cooling and freezing.
The energy that causes a change of state in a system is typically thermal energy. When thermal energy is added or removed from a system, it can cause the particles within the system to gain or lose kinetic energy, leading to a change in the state of matter (such as melting, freezing, boiling, or condensation).
No, when a liquid freezes, it undergoes a phase change from liquid to solid but does not lose chemical energy. The energy required for freezing is used to reorganize the molecules in the liquid into a solid structure, but the chemical energy of the molecules remains the same.
none. energy is lost and that is thermal
thermal energy lost
Thermal energy for freezing is the amount of heat energy that must be removed from a substance to lower its temperature to the freezing point and cause it to change from a liquid to a solid state. This process involves extracting enough thermal energy to overcome the attractive forces between molecules, allowing them to form a more ordered solid structure.