I would call the gas company. If gas has been turned off, they have to turn it back on.
Unlike water, there may not be any turn-off valve inside your house, After the gas is
turned on, you would have to relight the pilot lights for your gas appliances. Your
water heater, furnace and range may all need to have their pilots relighted. You can relight
all of these yourself, if you can follow the instructions in the manuals that come with
these appliances, or know from experience what to do. There may be some instructions
posted somewhere on the appliance. Otherwise, the gas company will do the job for a
reasonable fee, and if you watch, you can do it yourself next time. Actually, only the
furnace would be likely ever require re-lighting.
There is no current technology to turn water into a useable fuel source.
Check the thermocouple, or find a gas tech to do it.
A gas can't turn directly into a solid but a solid can turn into gas for example ice to water vapor.
It can turn to gas / steam might be considered a type of gas
Plasma can turn to gas by being cooled, reducing temperature.
it will heat as long as the gas is on and your pilot is still lit, you would have to call your gas company to turn it off.
when rain evaporates it does turn into gas like a cloud (fog) i think
true lighting can turn nitrogen compounds into gas
All matter can turn into solid, liquid, gas, or plasma form.
It is called sublimation when you turn a solid into a gas. When you turn a gas into a solid it is called deposition.
Yes, butter can turn into a gas, because when it is heated, the steam inside reacts with the butter, turning it into a gas
Natural gas is a fossil fuel. Other fossil fuels do not "turn into" natural gas.