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A physical change. Changing H2O from a solid to a liquid or a liquid to gas does not cause any chemical change as in the end you still have H2O.
The more energy a particle has (such as temperature) the faster it moves. Particles in a liquid that acquire increased energy have the ability to break free of the surface of the liquid and convert to a gaseous state.
An increase in thermal energy may change a solid to a liquid, a liquid to a gas, or a solid to a gas.A decrease in thermal energy may cause a change in the opposite direction - for example, from a liquid to a solid.
Add energy to change the particles in the liquid state on the window back into gas.
No. Simply heating honey, while making it less viscus, does not change its state. It remains a liquid. Unless heating is prolonged enough to cause evaporation, the honey will remain a liquid, so no change of state occurs by simply heating.
Decreasing the temperature a liquid become a solid.
A physical change. Changing H2O from a solid to a liquid or a liquid to gas does not cause any chemical change as in the end you still have H2O.
Freezing something?
Freezing something?
a loss in energy cause the change from liquid to solid like-wise a rise in energy causes a change from solid to liquid.
That could cause a change from solid to liquid, or from liquid to gas.
An increase in thermal energy may change a solid to a liquid, a liquid to a gas, or a solid to a gas.A decrease in thermal energy may cause a change in the opposite direction - for example, from a liquid to a solid.
Temperature and/or pressure cause the bonds holding particles together to weaken.
A rise in temperature
Hydrogen is a gas. The only method that can cause this gas to become liquid is pressure.
Change the temperature or pressure or both, to change a substance from one state to another. (such as gas to liquid)
Just freeze the h2o