Yes
When solid start to turn into liquid its melting point. When liquid start turning into solid its freezing point.
The temperature at which a solid starts turning into a liquid.
Yes. Changing from a solid to a liquid is a physical change.
The freezing point of an item can be equal to the melting point in some cases but not in all.the freezing point and the melting point both have to deal with temp.items with equal melting and freezing points:icemercuryacetic acid
Melting is the process of a solid turning into a liquid when heat is added, while freezing is the opposite process where a liquid turns into a solid when heat is removed. Melting occurs at the melting point of a substance, while freezing occurs at the freezing point.
This is the melting point.
Liquid nitrogen has no melting point. A melting point is the temperature when a solid turns into a liquid. Since liquid nitrogen is already a liquid, it has no melting point. It is already melted, compared to solid nitrogen.
No, Gas--->liquid (condensation). Solid---->liquid (melting)
"Melting" is the point at which a solid becomes a liquid. Ice will become water at anything above 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius, for instance. "Boiling" is the point at which a liquid becomes a gas. Water will turn to steam (as it boils) above 212 degrees Fahrenheit or 100 degrees Celsius. boiling is when you give fire and melting is when you turn something into liquid.
The term defined as the temperature at which a substance changes from a solid to a liquid state is called the melting point.
It would be solid before it reached the melting point. If it is liquid, it has already reached the melting point.
Temperature: Melting occurs at a specific temperature known as the melting point, while boiling occurs at the boiling point. Phase change: Melting involves solid turning into liquid, while boiling involves liquid turning into gas. Energy input: Melting requires energy to break intermolecular forces within the solid structure, while boiling requires energy to overcome intermolecular forces that hold the liquid together. End result: Melting results in a liquid, while boiling results in a gas. External pressure: Boiling point changes with external pressure, while melting point remains constant.