This process is evaporation.
The only changes of state in pure boiling water is from liquid to gas.
Yes, when water evaporates, its mass does not decrease. The water molecules simply change from a liquid state to a gaseous state, but the total mass of the water remains the same.
Evaporation is a physical process - transformation of a liquid in gas without boiling.
Evaporation is a change of state and therefore (like all C.o.S.) it is a physical change.
No!! when water evaporates it is a physical change.
Evaporation in water indicates a state change from liquid to gas. Water evaporates much more quickly when it is heated, because as the temperature rises the molecules move around much more quickly and eventually separate themselves from the liquid and mix with the air you breathe. The boiling point is the point where a state change occurs, similar to the freezing point. The state change at the boiling point will be from liquid to gas and the freezing point will be from liquid to solid.
Yes and no. Yes because it does keep its form kind of when it evaporates. All that happenes is that it just turnes into a less dense form. Then no because when it evaporates it is a gas until it changes again.
Water remain water, only the state of matter is changed from liquid to solid.
yes it does
It is changing he element that is a liquid from a liquid to water vapor. A gas.
Evaporated water is a gas.
When water evaporates into steam, it undergoes a physical change rather than a chemical change. This process involves the transition of water from a liquid state to a gaseous state due to the addition of heat, but the chemical composition of H₂O remains unchanged. Therefore, the molecules retain their identity, only changing their state of matter.