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if you were to constantly increase the temperature of a solid you would eventually reach the melting point for that particular substance, at which time the solid would melt to a liquid. if you were to keep heating the substance, at some point the liquid would reach its boiling point and would evaporate to a gas.
Uranium is a silvery-grey metal in both solid and liquid state, However on exposure to air it produces a black uranium oxide on its surface, which would happen much faster to liquid uranium than to solid uranium.
i would have thought it is solid melting to liquid, or liquid freezing to solid, or liquid to gas, or gas condensing to liquid. so Solid, Liquid, Gas? o_O
i would say its a solid.
Toothpaste is actually a solid. It is a solid that acts like a liquid.
If blood was not a liquid, you would die. As a solid, it could not move around the body. As a gas, you would explode.
chicken
Probably nothing, because if you heat up a solid normally it would melt into a smaller solid or even into a liquid. So you could infer that the opposite thing would happen if you cooled down a solid (nothing would happen)
if you were to constantly increase the temperature of a solid you would eventually reach the melting point for that particular substance, at which time the solid would melt to a liquid. if you were to keep heating the substance, at some point the liquid would reach its boiling point and would evaporate to a gas.
The steel would get warmer and possibly become a liquid.
air is neither liquid or solid, it is a gas
Ice is a solid and water is a liquid, so an ice cube floating in a glass of water would be a solid in a liquid solution. Lava is molten rock, which would also be a solid in liquid solution.
Ice is a solid and water is a liquid, so an ice cube floating in a glass of water would be a solid in a liquid solution. Lava is molten rock, which would also be a solid in liquid solution.
its a liquid because if it were solid it would not come out the bottle
In the case of water (liquid) you would freeze it into ice (solid).
Uranium is a silvery-grey metal in both solid and liquid state, However on exposure to air it produces a black uranium oxide on its surface, which would happen much faster to liquid uranium than to solid uranium.
When a solid changes to a liquid the process is called melting.