A solid, when sufficiently heated, can either become a liquid (melting) or can be converted directly into a gas (sublimation).
liquid - depending on what the solid was to start with
no !
A liquid becomes a solid when there is less heat. When a liquid loses heat, its particles slow down and come closer together, eventually forming a solid structure.
To become a solid, a liquid will absorb heat energy.
-- It could become just a warmer solid. -- If it gains enough heat energy, the solid could melt, becoming liquid. -- Depending on the ambient pressure, the solid could also sublime, becoming gas.
When you heat a liquid and it changes phase it becomes a solid.
Actually, a liquid becomes a solid when it loses heat, not when it gains heat. When heat is removed, the molecules slow down and eventually arrange themselves into a solid crystalline structure.
heat it up!
Most solids become liquid at their melting point. Heat water above 0°C, or iron above 1,535°C, and they will become a liquid.
A change in internal energy. For a solid to become a liquid, more energy must be supplied than released since it is an endothermic reaction. For a solid to change to a liquid, heat must be applied to the lattice to break its structure and increase the average KE of its constituent molecules. I could have written 4 more lengthy paragraphs but that would just be a waste of time...
it is only a solid at room temperature, when you heat it up it turns into a liquid
Solid to liquid is known as melting, where a solid substance transitions into a liquid state by absorbing heat energy. Liquid to solid is known as freezing, where a liquid substance transitions into a solid state by releasing heat energy.