what you freeze is the same that comes in to a liquid and it does it over and over
A temperature of 70 degrees Celsius is typically well above both the melting and freezing points of most common substances. For water, its melting point is 0 degrees Celsius and its freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius as well.
NO!!! However, on change of physical state;- solid to liquid it is 'melting' liquid to solid it is 'freezing' Similarly liquid to gas it is evaporation/boiling gas to liquid it is condensation. Different substances have different temperature for change of physical state. Water being the scientific standard has; - melting/freezing at 0oC boiling/evaporation at 100oC
No, boiling points and freezing points are examples of physical properties, not chemical properties. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances to form new substances, while physical properties describe characteristics that can be observed without changing the chemical composition of the substance.
Water's freezing point is the temperature at which liquid water turns into solid ice, which is 0 degrees Celsius. On the other hand, water's melting point is the temperature at which solid ice turns into liquid water, also at 0 degrees Celsius. Both freezing and melting points occur at the same temperature but represent opposite phase changes.
The hypothesis for the melting and freezing point of naphthalene could be that the melting point of naphthalene will be higher than its freezing point due to the typical behavior of most substances where solids melt at higher temperatures than they freeze. The hypothesis may also include factors like the purity of the naphthalene sample affecting its melting and freezing points.
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Melting and freezing points are identical.
Your question cannot be answered as written. Melting/ freezing points are at the same temperatures.
Yes, freezing and melting points are characteristic properties of a substance. They are specific temperatures at which a substance changes its state from solid to liquid (melting) or from liquid to solid (freezing) under normal atmospheric pressure.
Freezing and melting points are synonyms: at this temperature a solid become a liquid or a liquid become a solid.
Melting and freezing points are the same because a substance at a certain point can either freeze or melt. If energy is taken away from the compound, it will freeze. On the other hand, if energy is added, it will melt. This energy is called the heat of fusion.
Different chemicals have different physical properties, such as melting points (freezing points) and boiling points (vaporization points) waters freezing point is 0* C whereas nitrogen's freezing point is much lower.
A temperature of 70 degrees Celsius is typically well above both the melting and freezing points of most common substances. For water, its melting point is 0 degrees Celsius and its freezing point is 0 degrees Celsius as well.
The melting/freezing point of water is oC.The boiling point of water is 100 oC at standard pressure.Evaporation occur at any temperature.
Yes! Freezing (when a substance becomes solid) and melting points (when a substance becomes liquid) are characteristic properties.
1063 °C(lit.) Freezing points and melting points generally can be used interchangeably. Scientific data is reported as the melting point or mp. Purity will also effect the freezing point but very useful in determining the purity of a substance.
NO!!! However, on change of physical state;- solid to liquid it is 'melting' liquid to solid it is 'freezing' Similarly liquid to gas it is evaporation/boiling gas to liquid it is condensation. Different substances have different temperature for change of physical state. Water being the scientific standard has; - melting/freezing at 0oC boiling/evaporation at 100oC