At 1atm pressure, nitrogen should be cooled below -196C in order to liquify. When it comes to industrial purposes, a higher pressure is usually used as the meting point rises.
It must. You have to take heat out of the gas in order to liquify it.
No, Liquify requires Photoshop to work. Much of the code for Liquify is actually in the Photoshop application not the plugin.
To liquify a gas, it must be cooled below its critical temperature while maintaining a pressure above its critical pressure. This causes the gas to condense into a liquid state, where the intermolecular forces are strong enough to overcome the kinetic energy of the particles. This process is typically achieved through compression and cooling in a refrigeration system.
Because there is no pressure being placed on the gas, the molecules do not become condensed enough to form a liquid.
Yes you can. Go to Filter > Distort > Liquify. For more details visit related links.
An ideal gas is one in which each atom has no influence on its neighbors. So it would not liquify or solidify, because that would require some attractive force that one would exert on the other. So the real gas that most resembles an ideal gas is the one that is hardest to liquify, and that would be helium, which doesn't liquify at atmospheric pressure until you get it down to 4.2 degrees C from absolute zero (in other words, to 4.2 degrees Kelvin). No other gas has such a low boiling point.
Modify
within seconds it will liquify your smoothly because of its fast speeds and direction of the blades
it is part of the liquify filter. The Liquify filter lets you push, pull, rotate, reflect, pucker, and bloat any area of an image.
In order to liquify oxygen gas, the critical temperature is 154.58K (i.e., -118.57 °C) and the critical pressure is 5.043MPa.
My blender will liquefy fruits.
The higher the temperature, the more movement in the molecules, causing the substance to liquify, or turn to gas, whichever, more quickly than if there were no vibrations in the molecules.