Yes, water can occur in actually all three phases: gas, liquid, and solid. Solid water would be a glacier, ice, hail, etc.
water
The term that means all the liquid and solid water on Earth is "hydrosphere."
The lithosphere, which includes the Earth's solid crust and upper mantle, is mostly solid. Large bodies of water, such as oceans and seas, are found on the Earth's surface, outside the lithosphere.
Water can exist in its liquid, solid (ice), or gaseous (water vapor) state in the water cycle. The water cycle involves the continuous movement of water between the Earth's surface and atmosphere through processes like evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.
Frozen water; ICE
Yes. As a gas, it is called water vapor, and is invisible. As a liquid, it is called water, and as a solid, it is called ice.
Any substance can be a liquid, solid or gas, provided it has the right amount of energy; water is the only one to naturally occur in all three states on Earth, though.
Water.
Water can exist as a solid, liquid, and gas on Earth due to its varying temperatures and atmospheric conditions.
Yes, it most likely would.... However even though water vapour is a gas, it has some properties of liquid. Water also occurs as a solid (ice), in places such as Antarctica.
The three states or forms of water found on Earth are solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor).
Water can be found on Earth in three states of matter: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (steam).