Your dick
No.
Rubber contracts when heated.
Ice (frozen water) and Water (below 4 oC) expand when cooling. This is exceptional! Other substances, also Water (above 4 oC) expand when heated.
Heating will cause the gas to expand; or, if the container does not permit expansion, for the pressure of the gas to increase. Other changes to the gas depend on which gas is being heated.
Oil does expand when heated and contracts when cooled.
If a hydro-carbon is burnt it will make heat, CO2 and water however if a hydro-carbon is heated it will just expand into its surroundings
Any gas will expand when heated, assuming you keep pressure constant.
The gas will expand as it is heated.
gas will expand
Hydrogen gas expands when it is heated.
Applying heat to a gas will make it expand. If the volume of the gas is restricted (i.e. it cannot expand) then the pressure will increase.
Because when something heats it starts to develop into gas and the particles/atoms expand.
All of them can expand - for example, when they are heated. Gases usually expand more than solids or liquids.
Ice (frozen water) and Water (below 4 oC) expand when cooling. This is exceptional! Other substances, also Water (above 4 oC) expand when heated.
Rubber contracts when heated.
Heating will cause the gas to expand; or, if the container does not permit expansion, for the pressure of the gas to increase. Other changes to the gas depend on which gas is being heated.
No, metals always expand when heated and contract only when cooled.
As much as it's allowed to. Remember: Any gas always expands to fill the container it's in, even without heating it.