Everything depends on the boiling, melting, freezing temperatures of the element or product you are working with.
An example is water: when it starts as a liquid it needs to be heated in order to transform into a gas, from those gas particles need to combine and cool in order to fall to the earth as rain or precipitation. The liquid then needs to cool more in order to freeze into ice.
It is essentially the same principle for everything else, but you have to consider that some things will be only one or two of those states of matter. Water is the only substance scientists have found (or at least released to the public) that can be all three states of matter.
The phase changes of matter are melting (solid to liquid), freezing (liquid to solid), vaporization (liquid to gas), condensation (gas to liquid), sublimation (solid to gas), and deposition (gas to solid). These transitions occur due to changes in temperature and pressure.
Liquid to gas, solid to liquid, and liquid to solid
These changes of state are: solid to liquid, liquid to gas, gas to liquid, liquid to solid, solid to gas, gas to solid. The majority of substances have these state of matter changes.
These changes of state are: solid to liquid, liquid to gas, gas to liquid, liquid to solid, solid to gas, gas to solid. The majority of substances have these state of matter changes.
The melting phase changes are Solid~Liquid~Gas and the freezing phase changes are Gas~Liquid~Solid
Solid, liquid, gas, liquid, solid.
Gas, liquid,or solid
Solid, liquid, or gas.
solid to liquid to gas
Solid, liquid, gas...
Solid, liquid, or gas.
The states of matter are solid, liquid and gas. A solid melts to become liquid and a liquid evaporates to become gas. Sublimation is the direct change from solid to gas.