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Your question makes no sense. What substance changes from one state of matter to another (that is the first part and makes sense) at temperature and pressure experiencing earths surface? What on earth does that mean? pressure experiencing earths surface? What could it possibly mean? I really have no clue what you are trying to ask in the second part of the question. The first part however may give a clue to what you actually mean to ask. Maybe you mean "What substance changes from one state of matter to another at the temperature and pressure experienced on earths surface?" But using that as the question, there are literally hundreds or even thousands of correct answers. Here are a few Water, a liquid, changes to ice, a solid, and to steam, a gas and back to water Iodine can change from its solid form to a gas Ammonia can change from a liquid to a gas Freon can change from a liquid to a gas phosphorus can change from a solid to a gas gasoline, ether, liquid petroleum gas, naphtha, acetone, acetate all change from a liquid to a gas at atmosphere pressure at earths surface. Sodium changes from a solid to a gas. Hope this helps answer your question.
Increased temperature = increased volume of gas The above answer is non-sense. The pressure could increase with temperature and actually yield a smaller volume... here ya go: The ideal gas law is: PV = nRT, where P = pressure, V = volume, n= number of moles, R = ideal gas constant, T = Temperature in K
Plants detect seasonal changes by temperature and day length.Plants detect seasonal changes by the amount of day light.
There are five main senses that people experience: sight, smell, taste, touch, and hearing. Each sense is associated with different physical stimuli. For example, the sense of sight is associated with light waves, the sense of smell is associated with volatile molecules, the sense of taste is associated with dissolved molecules, the sense of touch is associated with pressure or temperature changes, and the sense of hearing is associated with sound waves. The relationship between a physical stimulus and the resulting sensory response is that the physical stimulus is converted into a neural signal by the sense organ, and then this neural signal is interpreted by the brain to produce the sensory response. The specific response depends on which sense is involved and what the physical stimulus is.
sense of balance
1 pain 2 pressure 3 temperature
NO it has to do with the sense of smell
The sense that concerns the vibratory sense is touch. Vibratory sense includes the feeling of pain, temperature, vibration and pressure.
Mechanoreceptors
They are responsible for such sensations as pain, temperature, touch, and pressure.
this question doesnt make sense to me!:(
Melting point. Common sense goes a long way in science.
Yes. Everything "flows downhill" in that sense, going toward the lower pressure, temperature, concentration, energy level, etc.
No. Skin does not sense temperature. Nerve endings in skin sense temperature.
Temperature is particles moving really fast and bumping in to each other (in a sense, but nothing really "touches" other things atomically or else they fuse), unless of course, they are at 0 D. kelvin, and pressure is just density in the air or in another sense it's compression.
Crayfish can sense changes in water pressure. They can also see to a limited extent. Additionally, they have two sets (pairs) of antennae that are sense organs. A link can be found below.
Sense organs are important for an animal's survival because they help the animal to stay safe. The are used to alert the animal to the presence of predators. They also help the animal to find food.