yes you can i have tried it in science class at my school it goes from solid , liquid , solid, i think
Maybe
The critical pressure of a substance is the pressure required to liquefy a gas at its critical temperature. Some examples are shown below.
It means to turn something into liquid.
It is a industrial purpose. It is easy to store when liquefied.
Melting point it would liquefy, boiling point it would vaporize.
All forms of gas will liquefy at a sufficiently low temperature.
All forms of gas will liquefy at a sufficiently low temperature.
You can liquefy metal by heating it to a high enough temperature.
The critical temperature for carbon dioxide is 304K (87.8°F [31°C]). That means that no amount of pressure applied to a sample of carbon dioxide gas at or above 304K (87.8°F [31°C]) will cause the gas to liquefy. At or below that temperature, however, the gas can be liquefied provided sufficient pressure is applied. The corresponding critical pressure for carbon dioxide at 304K (87.8°F [31°C]) is 72.9 atmospheres (~73000 kPa). In other words, the application of a pressure of 72.9 atmospheres of pressure on a sample of carbon dioxide gas at 304K (87.8°F [31°C]) will cause the gas to liquefy. See related link to read more about the Liquefaction of Gases.
Maybe
the suffix is fy
Helium
Yes
sandy soils
Cool the gas sufficiently and it will liquefy.
Depends which gas
liquefy, dissolve, thaw, soften