imagine that you are heating a pan of tap water on a cooker and taking
the temperature of the water with a thermometer every two minutes until
after the water has boiled
the particles are given more energy.
First the liquid gets hot, then it boils becoming a gas.
It boils until it evaporates.
Boiling. A liquid boils at a temperature at which its vapor pressure is equal to the pressure of the gas above it.
When the liquid molecules are heated, they move faster so the liquid boils and some molecules becomes gas molecules. When the liquid molecules are heated, they move faster so the liquid boils and some molecules becomes gas molecules.
The liquid will turn into a gas so the particles are gonna be moving around freely.
The water goes from the liquid state to the gas state. H2O(l) -> H2O(g)
boiling (point)
When water boils, it forms bubbles of water vapor. This happens because the heat energy makes the water molecules move faster and break free from the liquid, turning into gas. The bubbles you see are the water vapor escaping from the liquid water.
The temperature at which a liquid boils is called its boiling point.
yes it would because when the liquid boils the entire container of liquid is heated to the boiling point, meaning that the liquid would turn to the vapor form all around the liquid.
Liquid helium is a lot colder than liquid nitrogen.