Let's consider the case of ice. Ice is a solid. When heated, it gets transformed to water. Water is a liquid. Further heating changes water into gas.
Thus, heat can change a solid into both liquid and solid form.
The melting phase changes are Solid~Liquid~Gas and the freezing phase changes are Gas~Liquid~Solid
When water freezes it changes from a liquid to a solid. When water boils or evaporates it changes from a liquid to a gas.
cchemical change and energy change also the change of a gas to a liquid
They are physical changes.
A change in state involves a substance transitioning from one physical form to another, such as from solid to liquid (melting), liquid to gas (vaporization), or gas to liquid (condensation). This change is typically driven by changes in temperature or pressure.
The liquid to gas phase change is vaporizing; the reverse is condensing. The other phase changes are: - solid to liquid: melting - liquid to solid: freezing - solid to gas: sublimation - gas to solid: deposition
Four examples of changes in state are: solid to gas (sublimation), gas to solid (deposition), solid to liquid (fusion), and gas to liquid (condensation).Four examples of change on state are liquid to solid, solid to liquid, liquid to a gas, and gas to a liquid.
Water changes from a solid to a liquid through melting and from a liquid to a gas through evaporation. The reverse processes are freezing (liquid to solid) and condensation (gas to liquid). These changes in state occur due to variations in temperature and pressure.
The kinds of changes in substances that are always physical changes are changes in the state. This is the change from solid, to liquid and then to gas and the reverse.
How does particle behavior change as an object changes from a solid to liquid to gas
Condensation (gas to liquid or solid or liquid to solid), vaporization (liquid or solid to gas), sublimation (solid to gas), solidification (liquid to solid), or melting (solid to liquid).
The 5 changes of state are melting (solid to liquid), evaporation (liquid to gas), condensation (gas to liquid), freezing(liquid to solid), and sublimation (solid to gas or gas to solid)