None of the above. Heat is energy, not matter.
It depends on the phase change. When going from solid to liquid (melting), liquid to gas (boiling), or solid to gas (sublimation) heat is absorbed. When going from gas to liquid (condensation), liquid to solid (freezing), and gas to solid (deposition) heat is released.
when water gains or loses heat, it changes its state. When liquid water gains heat, it changes its state from liquid to gas. It becomes water vapor. When solid gains heat, it melts an changes its state from solid to liquid. When gas loses heat, it condenses into liquid. Gas, to liquid. When liquid loses heat, it becomes solid
Let's consider the case of ice. Ice is a solid. When heated, it gets transformed to water. Water is a liquid. Further heating changes water into gas. Thus, heat can change a solid into both liquid and solid form.
Heat the solid until it becomes a liquid or a gas.
Condensation
Solid to liquid is known as melting, where a solid substance transitions into a liquid state by absorbing heat energy. Liquid to solid is known as freezing, where a liquid substance transitions into a solid state by releasing heat energy.
Changes to a Liquid.
You can change the state of matter of a substance by applying heat to it. When you heat a solid, it melts into a liquid. When you heat a liquid, it evaporates into a gas. This process is known as melting and boiling.
A gas plus a liquid is.......I have no idea thats why I am asking you guys!!
When a solid absorbs heat, it may melt and turn into a liquid. When a liquid absorbs heat, it may vaporize and turn into a gas. Conversely, when a gas releases heat, it may condense and turn into a liquid, and when a liquid releases heat, it may solidify and turn into a solid.
Phase changes requiring the addition of heat energy are the phase changes from solid to liquid, liquid to gas, and solid to gas. These phase changes are termed melting (solid to liquid), evaporation (liquid to gas), and sublimation (solid to gas).
The states of water can be interchanged through the processes of melting (solid to liquid), freezing (liquid to solid), evaporation (liquid to gas), condensation (gas to liquid), sublimation (solid to gas), and deposition (gas to solid) by adding or removing heat energy.