If you are talking about a gas that is in solution the easiest thing is to reduce the pressure so the gas comes out of solution, similar to a diver ascending in the water column too quickly.
It would be a liquid at 2000 oC.
Liquid nitrogen
in a solution, the atoms of a solid or gas completely separate and mix with the liquid.
Generally speaking, methane gas can be "soluble" in liquid nitrogen if it was bubbled into it. Liquid nitrogen is cold enough to liquefy methane gas, and the liquid methane would then be miscible in the liquid nitrogen.
General classes of colloids are: gas in liquid, gas in solid, liquid in gas, liquid in liquid, liquid in solid, solid in gas, solid in liquid, solid in solid.
i dont know! does anyone?
liquid...how would it be a gas?
i wont tell the answer get away
Usually particles in a liquid or gas seperate, but particles within a gas divide more quickly than a liquid.
Heat!
liquid and gas because they both have an ability to flow
It takes up less room in liquid form that it would do as a gas.
Centrifuging it would be one way.
A mist is a gas. It is not a solid or a liquid. An example of a solid would be a rock, of a liquid would be water and of gas would be steam. Other examples of are gas: steam vapor/vapour (water vapour)
i gas changes into a liquid when it is cold because the gas will now be losing heat and this causes the molecules in the gas to form bonds, bringing them closer to together and resulting in a liquid.
If a liquid was to boil to change state, it would be changing from a liquid to a gas, and would be said to be boiling.
It would be a liquid at 2000 oC.