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It moves faster.

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Josianne Prohaska

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Q: What happened to particles of a substance as its temperature increases?
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What happened to the particles in a longitudinal wave as the amplitude increases?

As amplitude increases, the particles in a longitudinal wave become denser.


What happened to the conductivity of metals as temperature increases?

It decreases because the particles gain more energy and vibrate more. They cause more resistance to the current.


What happened to the kinetic energy of the particles in a sample of gas as the temperature of the sample increase?

The average Kinetic energy of the atoms in the sample will increase as the sample is heated.


What happened when the particles in an object begin to move slowly?

the temperature decreases.♥♥ (=^_^=)


What happened when impurity is added in phenol water system?

the critical solution temperature for phenol water system increases


When water is heated from 30 to 100 degree celsius what happened to its density?

Density decreases as expansion takes place when temperature increases.


What best describes what happened as environmental temperature increases from 20 degrees to 30 degrees?

It is very likely to be a catastrophe unless the change happens very, very gradually.


What is evidence that a chemical change has happened?

A substance changes into a new kind of substance.


What happened to the molecules of the solid substance as it change the phase?

Particles are held together by inter-particular forces. Above absolute zero, 0K all particles have energy. The energy can be vibrational as in solids, and rotational and translational kinetic energy. As the temperature increases the vibrational energy increases to such a point that the inter-particular forces are broken. The solid then usually turns to liquid as it loses its structure and then eventually a gas. Some solids can sublimate ie turn directly to a gas and omit the liquid phase. Example: Water molecules, H2O are held together by polar forces called "hydrogen bonding". The slightly positive hydrogens are attracted to the negative oxygens of neighbouring molecules. That is why water is a liquid at room temperature despite the small size of the molecule. Heating the water allows the molecules to vibrate breaking the hydrogen bonding. At around 100 oC all of the bonds have enough energy to break and the liquid turns to a gas.


Why does the thermistor's resistance go down as temperature increases but with bulbs it is the opposite effect?

well basically things happened and no-one really knows why so it was a complete waste of time. so erm yeah


What happened to the value of gravity when the value of distance increases?

it decreases


What happened to an atom when it gets oxidized?

Its oxidation state increases