The gas is water vapours.
i think in a kitchen! if you are boiling something for example spaghetti, the water used to boil it is in liquid form. and the steam rising from the pot is a gas (aka water in a gas form)! you're welcome :)
Water changes from a liquid to a gas in a process known as evaporation. (Think about a boiling pot of water on a stove).As the temperature rises, the water becomes water vapor, a gas.
No. That is a physical change of the liquid water turning to gas (steam)
Assuming enough heat is applied to the liquid for it to change phases, gas is what comes next. An example would be steam rising off of a pot of boiling water.
This depends. Are the pot noodles dry at room temperature? Then not yet .Are the pot noodles in boiling water? Is the water you are adding from the cold water tap? Then, Yes, as boiling will stop until the new water is at boiling temperature.
yes if its boiling yes
Water in a boiling pot changing to a gas IF you leave a glass of water out on a hot day, it will be gone in a couple of hours
water boiling in a pot
Boiling occurs on the surface of a liquid that has reached its boiling point. This also includes on the surface of any imperfections in the water, known as nucleation sites. These imperfections in water are often harmless, and are any other small particles that are in it. These imperfections are responsible for the rolling surface of a boiling pot of water. The water at a nucleation site expands into a gas, and bubbles to the surface of the water. In a perfectly distilled pot of water, in a perfectly smooth sided pot (tiny microscopic scratches in the surface of a pot can be nucleation sites too) the water would only steam at the surface, and no bubbles would form in it.
please help
Pea
No, it is usually called boiling pot or kettle.