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Nope. At room temperature, yes, but if you make it really cold, it will freeze. If you make it really hot, it will boil and then evaporate.
They freeze. Liquid hydrogen is very cold.
If it contained any liquid, it would freeze. If it did not contain any liquid, it would get VERY cold.
it will freeze in to a ice block
it depends on what kind of air if its helium squeaky voice Liquid air is extremely cold. If you were to drink it, you would freeze solid, which needless to say, is fatal.
Nope. At room temperature, yes, but if you make it really cold, it will freeze. If you make it really hot, it will boil and then evaporate.
no you have to freeze it to make it solid. it is really cold and you should try to make ice cream with it it really works
Every liquid, with the single exception of liquid helium, will eventually freeze if it gets cold enough. Helium, however, does not freeze.
They freeze. Liquid hydrogen is very cold.
Liquids will freeze in extreme cold.
If it contained any liquid, it would freeze. If it did not contain any liquid, it would get VERY cold.
the withdrawal of heat to change something from a liquid to a solid freeze is when a liquid turns back into a solid. or if it is cold outside instead of cold you could use the word freeze or freezing
if the sea is hot it will freeze
Well, if it's a hot temperature, liquid can evaporate. If cold, liquid may freeze.
No. The wind is composed of a small amount of water vapor and about 20% oxygen and about 80% nitrogen. The water vapor may freeze but the oxygen and the nitrogen cannot freeze at the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Oxygen has a much lower freezing point than liquid nitrogen and if the nitrogen were to be frozen, liquid nitrogen is not cold enough to freeze it...sort of like trying to make ice using cold water.
Under normal circumstances, liquid nitrogen is at a temperature of less than -196C - pretty cold!!!
By feeding it somthing really cold.