c. The sun
a very hot gas or steam (for water) or plasma maybe, but then that is not quite a gas, but a separate state.
Steam. The reason for this is water boils at the temperature of 212 degrees F. Steam can be heated to much higher temperatures than that. Some engines that are water cooled has steam at temperatures of over 700 degrees. Water basically becomes a plasma at this temperature.
it is called plasma.
After researching plasma TV's and attempting to answer the question: do plasma TV's contain human blood plasma? - there has been no answer given to this vital question. Where does the plasma for plasma TV's come from? How is it created? How is it combined with other elements/components to create organic/plasma TV's? These are questions to which there is no answer given.
i think it does
Steam is a gas. Actually, if you heat a gas, you will get the fourth state of matter-plasma. Plasma is a SUPER hot gas.
how do i eat
at 105 degreesCelsius,steam is still steam.at about 50,000 degrees Celsius,steam turns into plasma, the fourth state of matter.
c. The sun
4:1. ICE (Solid)2. WATER (Liquid)3. STEAM (Gas)4. (Plasma)The plasma state of water doesn't seem to have a name.But all materials can be Plasma if heated enough.
a very hot gas or steam (for water) or plasma maybe, but then that is not quite a gas, but a separate state.
Steam. The reason for this is water boils at the temperature of 212 degrees F. Steam can be heated to much higher temperatures than that. Some engines that are water cooled has steam at temperatures of over 700 degrees. Water basically becomes a plasma at this temperature.
Plasma Plasma Plasma Plasma
it is called plasma.
if rubber was a liquid it would be like water, if it was a gas it would be like steam, if it was a plasma you wouldn't be able to get anywhere near it without dieing therefore it must be a solid :-)
if rubber was a liquid it would be like water, if it was a gas it would be like steam, if it was a plasma you wouldn't be able to get anywhere near it without dieing therefore it must be a solid :-)