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Hey there......... when water is heated the molecules of water i.e. Hydrogen and oxygen gets heated and get lite and forms vapour which is carried on by air
They could reach their melting point and melt or they could char and react with the oxygen in the atmosphere. Some solids will ignite when heated.
The volume increase.
If there is not enough dissolved oxygen in water then most things will not be able to live in it.
hey guys the answer is i have no f-en idea
Hey there......... when water is heated the molecules of water i.e. Hydrogen and oxygen gets heated and get lite and forms vapour which is carried on by air
Ozone when heated gets decomposed. It decomposes into oxygen.
Decomposed to produce PbO and oxygen gas!
Evaporates
Nothing unless they are heated. If they are heated it will become iron oxide. Which is the same material that we find the ground
When copper is heated it oxidizes. The additional oxygen molecules it takes on when oxidizes leads it to have a higher mass.
A water bubble consists of oxygen. Bubbles occur because of escaping air from liquids when heated. There is plenty of oxygen in water and that is why the bubbles are mostly oxygen.
The water gets heated up and turns into a gas
It evaporates
It boils
it will now occur evaporation
Firstly, there are two hydrogen molecules and one oxygen molecule that make up water. These hydrogen molecules are bound by hydrogen bonds to the oxygen molecule. Hence the meaning of H20. 2 hydrogens and 1 oxygen. The hydrogen molecules that are bound to the oxygen molecule are broken at high temperatures therefore water (in liquid condition) is turned into water vapor (gas condition).