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When determining the melting point or the freezing point of something....that is when they are used....
melting point and/or freezing point (they mean the same thing/are the same temperature)
These terms are synonyms.
The scientific standard typically refers to the state change you refer to in terms of going up, so you need to know the melting point of aluminum to know when it becomes solid, which is 933.47 Kelvin (660.32°C or 1220.58°F).So anything above the melting point would be a liquid.And anything below the melting point would be a solid.
Melting is an exothermic process; we need heat for melting.
When determining the melting point or the freezing point of something....that is when they are used....
They're the same thing - it just depends on which direction (of temperature change) you're interested in.
melting point and/or freezing point (they mean the same thing/are the same temperature)
These terms are synonyms.
dissolving and melting point
NOT SURE, but it suggests to the melting point of a substance
Ionic compounds have melting points higher than covalent compounds.
Melting means the point at which a solid phase begins to change to a liquid phase. I.e. Water has a melting point of 32.1 Degrees Fahrenheit. At 32 it changes from the liquid phase to the solid phase. At 32.1 it reverses the process.
Melting (freezing) point: the temperature when the solid metal become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature when the liquid metal become a gas.
Yes. Melting point is changing from a solid to liquid & freezing point is changing from a liquid to a solid. Both occur at the same temperature & these terms are usually used interchangably, although melting point is probably used more often than freezing point.
The melting point of copper is 1084,62°C .
The temperature at which a solid, given sufficient heat, becomes a liquid. For a given substance, the melting point of its solid form is the same as the freezing point of its liquid form, and depends on such factors as the purity of the substance and the surrounding pressure. The melting point of ice at a pressure of one atmosphere is 0°C (32°F); that of iron is 1,535°C (2,795°F). See alsostate of matter.