Boiling point
Bromine and Mercury at room temperature. All can exist as liquids, but they must be heated or cooled first.
Sandstone is extremely porous and absorbs liquids like a sponge.. Shale is nearly impervious to liquids.
I know it sounds a little stupid, but supercooling is when water remains a liquid while it is below freezing point. Note, only some waters can do this.
Solids, liquids, and gases are all made up of protons, neutrons, and ions. They also all go through changes when heated or cooled.
Their molecules and atoms becomes tight and forms in that shape that they have been kept mostly for liquids.
Liquids expand when heated and contractwhen cooled.
No. They can be heated or cooled.
It contracts. solid
yes they do
Boiling point
Liquids expand when heated and contract when cooled.
when solids are cooled they stay as a solidwhen liquids are cooled they turn into a solidwhen gases are cooled they condense into liquidshope this helps ;)
When cooled gases change to liquids (usually) and then solids Solids don't change to gases upon cooling
I assume your question deals with expansion in volume under conditions of heating and / or cooling. I believe that most liquids expand in volume when they are heated and contract in volume when they are cooled. Water does not follow this pattern entirely - it expands when it is cooled from a liquid state to a solid state.
When gases are cooled, they convert to liquids. This is termed as condensation.
A solid can change Into a liquid when it is heated Example- when heated solid chocolate, the chocolate changes into a liquid. A liquid Can change into a solid when it is cooled Example - If you leave juice in the freezer , the liquid changes into a solid.