No. It loses thermal energy.
juice loses chemical energy in the freezer...
Because when something freezes, the atoms and molecules don't undergo a chemical change, they go through a physical change. By this, I mean that the individual atoms and molecules lose kinetic energy (energy that makes you move) in order to freeze. There is no chemical change here. Rather, the molecules and atoms are slowing down physically.
condensation
Condensation.
When water goes from a gas to a liquid, or a liquid to a solid, the water molecules have lower kinetic energy, and therefore they lose speed.
They lose energy.
No, liquid particles lose energy when frozen, everything loses energy when frozen and their molecular movement slows down. Their is a state called 0 degrees Kelvin which is the lowest temperature possible. At 0 degrees Kelvin all molecular motion is stopped and all energy is lost. Liquids would gain energy when heated.
juice loses chemical energy in the freezer...
the particles in a gas lose enough thermal energy to form a liquid.
The liquid becomes cold.
When energy is added,solid will melt into liquid or liquid will change into gas. (When energy is added it gains heat).When energy is removed, the liquid will turn into solid or the gas will turn into liquid. (When energy is removed the heat will lose).
It looses energy to the surroundings. When bindings brakes, energy is released.
Condense
If I am not wrong..this is what I learnt in chemistry. When a liquid is being frozen, the particles of that liquid will lose kinetic energy and slow down, causing them to move closer together. Thus, as the gaps between the particles decrease and the particles themselves get into a fixed position, it becomes a solid & the particles [only] vibrate in their fixed position. =D
they dont move as much
condensation
Condensation.